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1
OECD Council Working Party on Shipbuilding (WP6)
Report on ship financing
June 2007
2
Table of Contents
Executive Summary ........................................................................................................................... 3
Debt Financing ................................................................................................................................... 7
Commercial Banks/Export Credit Banks ......................................................................................... 7
Volume ............................................................................................................................................. 9
Financing for Vessel Construction ................................................................................................... 9
Selected Shipping Bank Debt Deals ...................................................................................... 12
Export Finance ...................................................................................................................... 17
Finance Companies, Hedge Funds ........................................................................................ 21
High Yield Bonds .................................................................................................................. 23
Public & Private Equity ................................................................................................................... 28
Public Equity .............................................................................................................................. 29
Private Equity ............................................................................................................................ 30
Special Purpose Acquisition Companies ................................................................................... 34
Ship Leasing ..................................................................................................................................... 35
UK Tax Lease ............................................................................................................................ 40
German KG ................................................................................................................................ 41
Norwegian KS ............................................................................................................................ 41
Offshore Finance .............................................................................................................................. 43
Selected Shipbuilding Finance Transactions ................................................................................... 50
Aker American Shipping ASA .................................................................................................. 50
Gulf Navigation ......................................................................................................................... 52
Nakilat, Inc ................................................................................................................................. 55
OOIL’s $480m Sale Leaseback with HSH ................................................................................ 58
Concluding Remarks and Analysis .................................................................................................. 61
3
IMPACT OF INCREASED CAPITAL MARKETS ACTIVITY ON SHIPBUILDING
Executive Summary
The global shipbuilding industry is fundamental to international trade because it produces the
oceangoing vessels that are the only practicable and cost effective means of transporting large volumes of
many essential commodities and finished goods around the world. Commodities that are carried by ships
constructed by international shipyards include, among others, crude oil, refined petroleum products, liquid
natural gas, iron ore, coal, grain, steel products and finished goods carried in containers.
Driven in large part by increased demand related to industrial production in China, charter rates rose
to historically high levels in 2003. This dramatic rise in the revenue generation ability of vessels led to an
increase in the value of new and used vessels. Although charter rates and the values of older used vessels
have since retreated, they remain at historically high levels and the shipbuilding industry continues to
enjoy a synchronized strength in vessel prices. Moreover, the values of modern vessels and newbuilding
vessels have not declined despite the minor correction in charter rates. Major shipyards have indicated that
their berths are fully committed until 2010 at very firm price levels.
The dramatic rise in the value of new and used vessels has created an increase in the demand for
capital to finance these vessels as illustrated in Figure 1.
Figure 1. Rising Vessel Values Have Lead to Increased Capital Requirements
$9,338 $9,864 $8,566
$17,759
$30,557$27,929
$35,597
$19.7$23.7
$9.4
$13.7
$25.8
$12.7$10.7
$0
$5,000
$10,000
$15,000
$20,000
$25,000
$30,000
$35,000
$40,000
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Valu
e o
f R
eport
ed S
ale
s (
US
$m
)
$0.0
$5.0
$10.0
$15.0
$20.0
$25.0
$30.0
Avera
ge P
rice
per V
essel (U
S$m
)
Value of Reported Sales Average Price per Vessel
6% -13% 107%
72%
-9%
7%
Source: C.W. Kellock & Co Ltd, Marine Money International.
Traditionally shipowners have used a combination of secured borrowing from commercial banks
together with their own equity to finance the purchase price or construction cost of a vessel. Since 2003,
however, when the shipping markets began their sharp rise in asset prices and charter rates, an increasing
number of shipowners have been more actively using alternative sources of equity capital, such as vessel
leasing, public equity offerings, reverse mergers, subordinated debt and high yield bonds to finance ships.
4
The use of outside equity capital has also increased as a result of sharply rising volume of mergers
and acquisitions, so-called “M&A”, which has resulted from the desire of certain owners to consolidate
their respective markets to gain economies of scale to improve profit margins and better serve their
customers, as illustrated in Figure 2. Other factors that have pushed the shipping industry into a stage of
increased consolidation include the emergence of growth-oriented publicly quoted companies that have
access to competitively priced capital and are expected by their shareholders to grow, increasingly strict
regulations that are challenging for smaller owners to comply with and generational change within
shipping companies whereby some families and financial sponsors have decided to opportunistically exit
the shipping industry altogether by disposing of their vessels as well as their operations.
Figure 2. Rising M&A Activity Fuels Equity Demand
$667$0 $300 $330
$885 $820
$2,245
$10,376
$14,425
$11,280
$0
$2,000
$4,000
$6,000
$8,000
$10,000
$12,000
$14,000
$16,000
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
(US
$ m
illio
ns)
Source: Marine Money International.
Since 2003, the global capital markets have been highly receptive to financing the international
shipping industry because shipping has been producing strong cash flows at a time when benchmark
interest rates in Europe and America fell to historical lows as illustrated in Figure 3. The low interest rate
environment has caused investors to embrace shipping investments as an alternative way to achieve a
current return on capital. An overview of the broad range of capital products available to shipowners
appears in Figure 4.
5
Figure 3. Low Interest Rates and High Shipping Markets Coincided to Create Investment Opportunities
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
Jan-80 Nov-82 Sep-85 Jul-88 May-91 Mar-94 Jan-97 Nov-99 Sep-02 Jul-05
(1000s o
f U
SD
per
day)
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
Cape VLCC 2000 TEU Containership Federal Funds Rate
Source: Marsoft, the Federal Reserve.
Impact on Shipbuilding
Marine Money analysis of ship financing transactions from the period 2003-2006 indicates that
innovative and alternative ship financing schemes have had limited direct impact on the shipbuilding
industry.
Although the value of contracts for the future delivery of vessels is affected by conditions in the
charter market and the perception of future market conditions, such contracts represent “dead money” for
investors unless those contracts are sold or novated. The result is that the primary source of financing for
newbuilding contracts continues to be, as it has historically been, equity capital contributed by shipowners
themselves and construction financing provided by commercial lending institutions and export credit
banks.
Although the reference period saw an unprecedented volume of capital formed through myriad new
capital markets structures and products, these products and structures have been constructed to monetize
current cash flow, which are returned to investors in the form of coupon payments comprised of returns on
equity and the returns of principal.
Exceptions to this trend include, among others, deals such as Omega Navigation, Capital Product
Partners, Danaos Shipping and Seaspan which allocated a portion of their proceeds toward the purchase of
identified ships under construction at the time of the equity offering. More simply, alternative ship
financing technologies have been primarily used to capture the cash flow of existing vessels, and not to
finance new ones.
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Figure 4. Summary of Global Ship/Shipyard Financing Alternatives
Instrument Example of Leading Provider/Advisor Loan to Value Cost
Most Active Markets
Ideal Vessel Type History
Tax Benefits
Debt Markets
Bilateral Loans HSH Nordbank 65% L + 85-200 Germany Any Traditional No
Syndicated Loans Nordea 65% L + 100-250 Norway Any Traditional No
Finance Companies GE Capital 75% L + 300-400 USA Any Traditional No
Subordinated Debt Navigation Finance Corp. 100% L + 800 USA Any Innovative No
High Yield Bonds Jefferies & Co/DnB Nor Up to 100% L + 600 USA/Norway Any Innovative No
Export Credit KEXIM Up to 80% Korea Newbuildings Innovative No
Equity Markets Minimum Size
SPAC Maxim Group $100,000,000 7%, + expenses USA Any Innovative No
Private Equity Dahlman Rose $100,000,000 5%, $300,000
retainer USA Any Innovative Sometimes
Public Equity Merrill Lynch $100,000,000 7% USA/Singapore/ Norway Any Innovative No
Vessel Leasing
German KG Konig & Co. 100% 12% Germany Newbuildings Traditional Yes
Norwegian KS Ness & Risan 100% 12% Norway Any Traditional No
Private Leasing Co's First Ship Lease 100% 12+% Global Any Innovative No
Public Leasing Co's Ship Finance International 100% 12+% USA/Singapore Any Innovative No
However, the increased capital markets activity has indirectly infused liquidity into the shipbuilding
market by pushing up asset values and providing equity capital to shipowners who then redeployed that
capital into the newbuilding market. This is most evident in the leasing market where shipowners have
been actively selling older values and leasing them back and often using the cash proceeds of the sale to
place orders for new vessels. Were the capital markets not so receptive to shipping transactions in recent
years, we believe much of the liquidity that has been directed toward shipbuilding would not exist.
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I. Debt Financing
Commercial Banks/Export Credit Banks
1. Single tranche commercial bank loans ranging from 50-75% of the value of the asset being
financed have traditionally comprised the largest portion of ship financing arrangements globally. Due to
its relatively inexpensive cost and flexible terms, commercial bank debt provides the foundation of most
capital structures of public and private shipping companies. Commercial loans can be arranged to finance
the construction of vessels and/or as their permanent “take out” financing. In addition to commercial
banks, export credit banks, such as KEXIM, play an active role in offering competitively priced
construction and permanent financing for vessels.
2. Commercial loans, whether offered by commercial banks or export credit banks, are executed
both on a syndicated basis, whereby multiple lenders provide capital to a single borrower, and on a
bilateral basis, whereby a single lender provides capital to a single borrower. Syndicated and bilateral
shipping loans are comprised of a base rate, generally the London Interbank Offering Rate (LIBOR), plus a
margin.
3. The interest rates for ship financing loans may be swapped and fixed for the duration of the loan,
remain floating or involve other interest rate management products. Although LIBOR represents the base
rate in the majority of ship financing transactions, it is important to note that this does not necessarily
reflect the cost of funds for the lending bank.
4. The results for 2007 shipping banker survey indicate that over 2/3 of commercial lenders to the
shipping industry believe that 60-70% is a reasonable advance rate for a charterfree newbuilding. Sixteen
and ½ percent believe the percentage should be lower, while only 15.4% are comfortable with advance
rates over 70%. These figures we consider representative of the industry as a whole, where as project
finance deals such as Nakilat or highly structured ones such as that done by OOIL, where overall debt
financing can reach 90%, are exceptions rather than examples of the financings typically borne by the
mainstream market.
5. The commercial bank lending market for shipping deals is highly competitive with many lenders
offering standard or similar terms including loan pricing, leverage, amortization profile, repayment
schedule and fees. The terms featured in ship finance loans vary according to, among other things, the
credit quality of the borrower and charterer, the amount of recourse made available to the lender and the
age and type of asset being financing.
6. Average loan amortization profiles are approximately 15-18 years for a new vessel and loan
tenors are typically 8-10 years for a new vessel, leaving borrowers with a balloon repayment that must be
refinanced at the maturity of the initial loan. Commercial banks generally extend shorter terms and use
shorter amortization profiles for vessels that have limited useful lives remaining. Where the charterer is an
investment grade company that enters into a “hell or high water” long-term charter arrangement, lenders
may be able to offer higher levels of financing and longer terms.
7. The important terms and conditions of the loans such as loan profile and tenors, advance rate and
interest rate are all determined by the combination of the credit quality of the borrower and security
package provided. None of the terms can be separately attributed to specific conditions.
8
Figure 5. Average Spreads for Syndicated Shipping Loans
Figure 6. Shipping Syndicated Loan Volume
122
145
201
126
181
113 117
3039 41 33 38
17 21
0
50
100
150
200
250
1H02 2H02 1H03 2H03 1H04 2H04 1H05
Avera
ge M
arg
ins (
bps)
Drawn Undrawn
$10,385$16,514
$27,092
$15,199
$76,380
$61,771
$14,557
$0
$10,000
$20,000
$30,000
$40,000
$50,000
$60,000
$70,000
$80,000
$90,000
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
$0
$50
$100
$150
$200
$250
$300
$350
Amt ($m) Average Deal Size ($m)
Source: Nordea, Dealogic. Source: Dealogic.
8. Companies frequently seek commitments from banks to lend more than they need to actually
need to use at a given time. The drawn spread applies to the amounts which a company has actually
borrowed from a bank, whereas the undrawn spreads represents the fee due on amounts a bank has
committed to keep available for a company but that that company has not yet used.
9. Figure 7 below sets forth the Top 20 reporting commercial lenders by portfolio size with data as
of May 1, 2006 (Please note not all banks choose to report this data to Marine Money, including some
important shipping lenders such as Citigroup and Calyon).
Figure 7. Bank Shipping Portfolio Volumes
$29.5
$17.5
$14.0$13.1$12.6
$8.9 $8.2 $7.9 $7.8 $7.5 $6.6 $6.2 $6.0 $5.4 $5.4 $5.0 $4.5 $4.0 $3.0 $3.0
$0
$5
$10
$15
$20
$25
$30
$35
HS
H
RB
S
DnB
Deuts
he
Schiffs
bank
Nord
ea
DV
B
BoS
Danis
h S
hip
Fin
ance
SM
BC
Com
merz
bank
HV
B
DB
Fort
is
ING
Bre
mer
AB
N
BN
P
Llo
yds T
SB
JP
M
Dankse B
ank
(bill
ions)
Source: Marine Money International.
9
Volume
10. Time and again there are efforts to quantify the fragmented ship mortgage market. And while it
would be helpful if all the various national flags and flags of choice would obligingly tally their data this
result does not appear to be forthcoming any time within the foreseeable future. As such we can best gauge
the size of the industry from various other data, including Clarkson estimates that suggest the total quantity
of newbuildings ordered in 2006 should near $110 billion. At August 1, 2006 Clarkson estimated the total
newbuilding orderbook at 5 386 vessels of 269.1 million deadweight tons and 117.4 million compensated
gross tons to and to have a contracted value of around $264 billion. Assuming 75% debt finance, this
would require $198 billion in debt commitments over the next few years as the contracted vessels are
constructed and delivered. While the syndicated loan and public debt portions of this number are growing,
a majority is still composed of mortgage debt.
Financing for Vessel Construction
11. The vast majority of the capital committed for newbuilding contracts is of course not paid up
front. Payment is made in installments based on percentages of the contract price and certain milestones
achieved in the contracting for and construction of each vessel. For example, an owner may be required to
pay five installments, each equivalent to 10% of the contract price of the vessel, during vessel construction.
One contract for a newbuilding in China required a first installment to be paid at contract signing, a second
payable 12 months after contract signing, a third due at the cutting of the first steel plate of a vessel, a
fourth payable at the keel-laying of the first section of the vessel, and a fifth at the launching of the vessel.
The remainder of the contract price would be due upon delivery of the vessel to the buyer.
12. With wait times for vessels often stretching three years or more, the owner is frequently expected
to fund the 5-10% down payment due at contract signing. Once the steel cutting on the vessel has begun
delivery is typically expected in under one year, banks are more willing to come in with finance, ultimately
providing somewhere between 50% and 75% of the price of the vessel, or up to 80% with export credit.
Refund Guarantees
13. Needless to say, quite a lot of risk is involved in such contracts. The yard must trust that the
owner is good for all promised payments, but more importantly the owner must trust that the yard is both
willing and able to complete the vessel as specified and on time. This is particularly troubling for newly
developing “Greenfield” yards such as those growing in China. To help mitigate this risk, yards are
expected to provide refund guarantees, simply put to ensure in some way that if they are not able to deliver
on the vessel as promised, then they can in the least repay the owner his initial payments. These are
frequently backed by local state-affiliated banks such as the Bank of China, The Export-Import Bank of
China and The Export-Import Bank of Korea. Insurance products are even available to protect the
shipowner in the event of a default by the bank or sovereign guarantor.
Traditional Shipping Banks
14. As the largest financiers of the shipping industry, HSH Nordbank and the Royal Bank of
Scotland, with shipping loan portfolios of $29.5 billion and $17.5 billion respectively, are among those
with tried and true programs for shipbuilding finance they use regularly with their clients. The Royal Bank
of Scotland, or RBS, for one however does not engage in yard finance, indicating a clear differential in
their minds between the risk and expertise necessary to finance a ship under construction at a yard and that
necessary to finance a yard directly.
15. HypoVereinsbank, or HVB, a member of Unicredit Group, takes a different tack on these issues
however. HVB in its experience has concluded that the best response to a shipyard that has failed to fulfill
10
its contractual obligations, frequently through time and/or cost overruns, is not necessarily to pull the
contract and cash in the refundment guarantee. Rather both shipowner and yard can often be better served
with a sort of shipbuilding workout, depending of course on the experience, capabilities and intentions of
the yard and the interests of the owner. HVB has developed a shipyard consulting program which can
assist with problematic yard contracts or even beforehand by advising owners on what yards are worth
choosing. Figure 8 illustrates how a struggling shipyard can easily develop liquidity problems compared to
incoming payments, precisely the type of situation HVB specializes in sorting out.
16. The bank has even gone so far as to win the mandate to advise on the privatization of the
Croatian shipbuilding industry. Certainly its enlarged service offerings where shipbuilding finance is
involved highlight the risks in this area and the reasons why established players with a vested interest in
the business are often the most suited and most willing to provide finance for newbuildings.
Figure 8.
Source: HypoVereinsbank.
Currency
17. In international newbuilding contracts that can easily be worth hundreds of millions of dollars
and span several years, currency issues can be cause for more than minor concern. Contracts for
international shipping are typically done in US dollars, but as many of the costs incurred while building are
in local currency a falling dollar clearly impacted many yards.
18. The opposite can also be true. Many cruise companies who order ships in Europe but realize
revenues in US dollars have begun looking for ways to control euro contract risk. Carnival Corp for
example in November of 2006 issued just under one billion dollars worth of eurobonds in response to
weakness in the dollar and an orderbook almost half euro-denominated.
11
19. All the same proper currency risk management can be key to success for many yards, such as
Daewoo in Korea, who recorded a 2006 net profit almost eight times higher than that of 2005. Proper
hedging against the rise of the Korean won against the dollar was cited as a factor in this result. Yards in
China for a time benefited from a yuan peg to the dollar that it was popularly argued undervalued the yuan.
This secured for Chinese yards a currency benefit for all US dollar orders. When the yuan peg was changed
to a basket of currencies it complicated matters and eroded this advantage to an extent.
20. All in all, however, very few shipping companies wish to play currency risk and shipbuilding risk
together, and as such, as illustrated by Carnival’s move typically seek financing that is in the same
currency as contracts.
Covenants
21. Presented below are basic terms found in credit facilities offered by commercial banks and export
credit banks.
First-priority mortgage on subject vessels.
Assignment of Borrower’s time charters and earnings.
Assignment of the insurances on each of the vessels that are subject to a mortgage.
Assignment of the vessel management agreement with Ship Manager.
Pledge of Borrower’s retention account; and
Assignment of Borrower’s interest in any hedging arrangement.
22. Credit facilities generally contain financial covenants requiring borrowers to, among other things,
ensure that:
Borrower’s tangible net worth (the adjusted amount paid up or credited as paid up on our
share capital less intangible assets as further defined in the credit facility) will always exceed
a certain pre-agreed amount.
Borrower’s interest and principal coverage ratio (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation
and amortization to interest and principal payment expense) will at all times be greater than or
equal to 1.1 to 1.0.
Borrower’s net interest coverage ratio (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization to net interest expense) will at all times be greater than 2.5 to 1.0.
Market value of the fleet will not be less than 120% of all outstanding advances.
Borrower’s total debt must at all times be less than 65% of total assets, which include,
generally, the current book value of all vessels owned or leased with a purchase option, cash
and certain marketable securities.
23. Commercial bank and export credit bank facilities usually feature covenants, including covenants
requiring borrowers to maintain adequate insurance coverage, provide the facility agent with copies of
financial statements, notify the lenders of any event of default, obtain and comply with any necessary
authorizations, comply with all applicable laws where the failure to comply is reasonably likely to have a
material adverse effect, maintain the classification and repair of the fleet in accordance with industry
practice, lawfully and safely operate the fleet, discharge any liabilities and arrest of any containerships in
the fleet within 30 days, provide the lender with information in respect of any total loss, class
recommendation and environmental claims and comply with ISM Code and ISPS Code.
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24. Commercial bank and export credit bank credit facilities contain restrictive covenants that
prohibit borrowers from, among other things: substantially changing the general nature of our business,
changing the flag, class or management of our vessels without the lenders’ consent, participating in
mergers with other entities, releasing proceeds of insurance in respect of a vessel without the prior
approval of the lenders in amounts equal to or greater than $20.0 million and paying dividends if an event
of default has occurred and is continuing.
25. Below are examples of events of default:
Non-payment of amounts due under the credit facility unless due to administrative delay and
cured within 3 business days.
Default by borrower, other than payment default, under any material provision of the loan
agreement or security document, except, in the case of a default capable of remedy in
accordance with the facility, a default remedied within 30 days of the earlier of notice to us
and discovery.
Breach of a material representation or warranty not remedied within 30 days of the earlier of
notice to Borrower and discovery.
Cross-default of other indebtedness of said amount.
Event of insolvency or bankruptcy.
Failure to pay a final judgment or court order.
Cessation of business.
Any attachment, sequestration, distress, execution or analogous event affecting Borrower’s
assets having an aggregate value pre-agreed value that is not discharged within 30 days.
Unlawfulness, non-effectiveness or repudiation of any material provision of the credit facility
or a related finance document.
Invalidity of a security document in any material respect or if any of those security documents
ceases to provide a perfected first priority security interest; and
If an event of default is outstanding, the lenders may cancel the credit facility and/or declare
the outstanding amounts due and payable.
Figure 9. Selected Shipping Bank Debt Deals Done to Fund Newbuildings
Borrower Bank(s) / Advisor(s) Deal Size (US$M) Pricing, Purpose, Remarks Date
Odfjell Citibank First pre-delivery financing for 3 x 33,500 dwt chemical tankers 1998
B&N Viking ABN Amro $250 Funding for JV purchasing newbuilds 1998
NCL DnB, KfW $382 Pre & post delivery financing 1998
Odfjell Citibank $60 Financing for 4 x 6,000 dwt newbuildings 1998
Roekke Chase $800 Guarantee facility to support acquisition of Aker RGI 1998
Samsung Heavy Industries American Marine Advisors $84 Construction financing of two car carriers maturing in 2000
Jan-99
Golden Ocean Group MeesPierson $61 VLCC newbuilding Feb-99
Festival Cruises Crédit Agricole ($132) $451 Delivery of two Cruise New Buildings, matures in 2013
Feb-99
United Shipping Inv. Commerzbank (Milan) $35 5 X Newbuildings matures in 2009 Feb-99
13
Oddfjell Citibank $60 4 x 6,000dwt newbuildings Feb-99
Minoan DNI $42 Pre Delivery Finance Ferry Newbuilding Apr-99
International Shipholding Group Deutsche Bank, SSB $47 Pure Car Carrier newbuilding Apr-99
Viken Crédit Agricole $38 2 X Suezmax (pre delivery) matures in 2001 Jun-99
Eletson Citibank $53 Financing 2 Halla panamax newbuildings, 2008 maturity, pricing at L+125
Jun-99
Concordia Chase Manhattan plc $165 Post delivery financing of two VMAX & refinancing of existing loans, 2006 maturity
Jun-99
Societa Esercizio Cantieri Unicredito $260 construction of 4 ro-ro vsls. For Stena Sep-99
Minoan Lines National Bank of Greece/Citibank $250
4 ferry newbuildings, 2011 maturity, pricing at L+112.5
Sep-99
Sonasing Kuito MeesPierson/Fortis Bank $134 Conversion and charter of the FSPO unit Kuito, 2004 maturity
Sep-99
NCL Bank of Nova Scotia $225 Cruise ship newbuilding (mandated) Sep-99
Renaissance Cruises Crédit Agricole Indosuez construction of two 700 passenger cruise vsl.
Oct-99
ResidenSea CBK ASA $200 Construction financing, 2001 maturity Oct-99
Green Compass (Evergreen) Uni-Asia Finance $112 5,600 teu container newbuilding, 2009 maturity
Nov-99
Festival Cruises Crédit Agricole Indosuez $75 Enlargement of two vessels Nov-99
P&O Port of India HSBC $50 Construction Finance, 2007 maturity Feb-00
National Iranian Tanker Co China X-M Bank $370 5 x 300,000 dwt VLCCs - Guarantees Mar-00
Laurin Royal Bank of Scotland $50 KG for 2 Newbuilds Jul-00
E9E RoRo (Turkish Interests) NIB Capital $60 2 x RoRo NBs Jul-00
OSG Nedship/ING/DnB/Mees/NIB Capital $350 Revolver, priced at L+65
Jul-00
First Olsen
DnB, Den Danske Bank, Union Bank of Norway, HSBC, SHL $90 Tanker Newbuilding
Jul-00
IM Skaugen CBK, NIB Capital $70 4 x NB Gas Carriers (China) Jul-00
P&O Cruises ABN Amro $131 Dutch JV structure (25%) Cruise NB Oct-00
Kvaerner Scotial Capital, SE Banken $590 Offbalance construction finance for cruise NB
Nov-00
Shipping Corp of India Royal Bank of Scotland $29 Finance of Aframax Newbuilding
Nov-00
Royal Bank of Scotland $29 Finance of Newbuilding, priced at L+105 Nov-00
Exmar CBK $120 LNG Carrier NB Nov-00
Shipping Corp of India Bank of Nova Scotia $86 3 Aframax newbuildings, 2008 maturity Nov-00
NEL Chase, Crédit Lyonnais $115 2 x ferry NBs Dec-00
Stelmar Royal Bank of Scotland $23 1 x 70,000 NB product tankers due 2010 Jan-01
Stelmar Nedship. Deutsche Shiffsbank $45 2 x 70,000 NB product tankers due 2010
Jan-01
Stelmar Alpha Bank $23 1 x 70,000 NB product tankers due 2010 Jan-01
Seatrade Crédit Agricole, Deutsche Shiffsbank $145 To finance 2 VLCC newbuildings
Mar-01
Hellespont Chase, Citi, Fortis $200 50% leverage on 4 x ULCC newbuildings; priced at L+138
Mar-01
Knutsen OAS DnB, Lloyds $113 LNG Newbuilding Jun-01
Ocean Rig CSFB $100
To finance last payments towards 2 x BINGO 9000 rigs under construction at Friede Goldman
Jul-01
14
Golar LNG Nordea $32 One year facility to finance downpayment on LNG newbuilding
Jul-01
Astrolabe Unknown $30 Astrolabe has been given this mezz facility to bridge funding gaps in shipping projects
Jul-01
CPShips
Citi, BOS, CL, DnB, Deutsche, ING, HSBC, VuW, BNS, Deutsche, HLB, Natexis, DvB $175
To finance 800m ship expansion programme
Aug-01
Seaspan
Fortis, CSFB, Deutsche Shiffsbank, DVB Nedship, HELABA, Deutsche Geossenschaft $121
Pre & Post Delivery of 5 x 4,250 TEU Container Vessels on COSCO charter
Oct-01
Minoan Alpha Bank $250 Newbuilding finance Nov-01
CPShips Citibank $350 To finance $800m ship expansion programme
Dec-01
Single Buoy Mooring (IHC Caaland)
NIB, Fortis, ING, BOS, DvB, Lloyds, Scotia, Natexis, Rabo, VuW $200
To finance construction of FPSO replace P-36 that sank off brazil. On 5 1/2 yr charter to Petrobras.
Jan-02
Navieras F Tapias JPM, BOS, Commerz, CAI, DvB, LB Kiel $167
To finance an LNG NBs. Pricing at 120 points (17.5 less than Exmar)
Mar-02
Exmar
Citi/Nordea. BOTM, Sumi, CAI, DnB, Fortis, HLB, VuW, Nedship $300
Finance 2 LNG NBs with MOSK. Charter to El Paso, Pricing: 137bps, 10 yrs. Res. Val. is $80/vsl
Mar-02
CMA/CGM DVB, NIB, Nordea, Bank of Scotland $88
To finance container newbuild. Includes junior tranche for NIB, DVB Jun-02
OSG HLB, Deutsche Shiffsbank $125 To finance 4 Aframax newbuildings. Deal done on Bilateral Basis Jun-02
OSG RBS $100 Fin. 2 VLCCs Newb. 100bps with a 19 yr amort. 12 yr term. Bilateral Jun-02
Teekay Nordea, DnB, DVB, Deutsche Bank $200
To finance 5 NBs on to 12 year charters to TOSCO Jun-02
MISC Japan Bank $850 Fund purchase of 6xLNG newbuilds, 55% Japan Bank Rumoured. Aug-02
IM Skaugen Chinese Export Import Bank $32 Second 10 yr guarantee facility. 2 x 10,000 CBM LPG 4.95% on 75% gearing Aug-02
P&O Nedlloyd Citibank $200 For TEU, tenor, 9years, 8yr post delivery. Sep-02
Torch Offshore Regions Bank, EDC $50 Davie Shipyard conversion of Midnight Express Nov-02
Matson Undecided $210 Title XI for Kvaerner vessels Nov-02
TEN CBG, RBS,DS, LBK $247 circa 2.97-all in term financing of newbuildings Nov-02
B+H European, Korean Banks $275 9 newbuildings, 6xMRs, 3xPanas Dec-02
CSAV/Carlysle BTM Capital $75 Equipment securitization Dec-02
Novoship CAI, RBOS, BNP, NIB, Natexis $108 2 facilities, 4 x product tankers
Dec-02
Eisa Shipyard (Transpetro) BNDES (Brazil) $228 Proceeds will fund construction of 2x suezmax/2x aframax Jul-03
Teekay DVB, Others $300 Pricing is less than 100 basis points. Newbuilding Finance
Aug-03
Seaspan
Fortis Capital Corp./Korea Export Import Bank on pari passu senior, Mezzanine in the market now, equity from Washington Group
approx. $288
9 newbuildings ordered at about $40million apiece for a complete package of $360 million. KEXIM terms have to be OECD compliant
Aug-03
Hyundai Merchant Marine Korean Development Bank $450 Financing for five 7,000 TEU newbuilds Aug-03
15
Qatar Shipping Company Crédit Lyonnais, Korea Export Import Bank $223 Fleet expansion of 6 aframax newbuilds
Oct-03
Novoship KEXIM $130 CIRR Rate, 12 year term; Proceeds to finance 6x VLCCs at HHI 2004
Teekay Fortis, KEXIM $150 12-year deal, 80% leverage, 4x afra NBs - CIRR rate 2004
Manson Construction Bank of America Circa $45 US flag hopper dredge 2004
Petrojack Jurong Shipyard $105 Yard provides 80% loan at L+475, 3-year term 2004
Hellas Flying Dolphins ABN Amro E 26.6 12-year deal on newbuildings 2004
Teekay Shipping Calyon, KEXIM, DnB, ING, Nordea, RBS $468
Commercial tranche L+90, EXIM tranche L+40 2004
Siem Offshore DnB NOR $230
$150m loan & $80m bonding/guarantee facility; to help finance acquisition of Halliburton's share in Subsea 7 2004
Exmar Citigroup, Nordea, KEXIM $160 CIRR rate, 12-year term, 1x LNG; 80% gearing 2004
Angelicoussis Interests
Commercial tranche: Citigroup, DnB HSBC, BNP; Export credit: KEXIM $450 CIRR Rate, 12-year term, 3x LNG 2004
Hanjin Shipping SocGen, KDB $200 3 x 6500 TEU container @ $94.5m each for delivery in 2007 from HHI Jan-05
Hyundai Merchant Marine Undetermined $910 12-year syndicated loan to finance the construction of 9 containerships Mar-05
OceanBlue Caterpillar $75 Credit line to assist Kjell Inge Rokke in its venture into US flag shipping Mar-05
Eastern Drilling DnB NOR $275 6-year facility to finance construction of new drilling rig from Samsung Apr-05
Western Baltic BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse $276
To help fund orders for 3 x 116,000 dwt vessels and 6 x ice-class products tankers by subsidiary of oil trader Western Petroleum Apr-05
North-Western Shipping International Finance Corporation $42
Acquisition of up to 2 x dry bulk newbuildings May-05
Volga Shipping International Finance Corporation $47
Acquisition of up to 2 x dry bulk newbuildings May-05
Fesco Citibank NA $31 Fund declared option for containership order; 8.5-year fixed rate of 4.36% p.a. May-05
Danaos Holding KEXIM $135 Fund purchase of 2 x 9600 TEU containerships from Samsung Aug-05
OSG Nakilat Corporation Royal Bank of Scotland $869
Secured loan to partially finance 4 x Q-Flex LNG carriers for OSG/Qatar Gas Transport JV Aug-05
North China Lines (Hosco) Nordea $61 Financing for 175,000 dwt bulker newbuilding Oct-05
J5 Nakilate consortium Bank of Tokyo Mistubishi, DnB NOR, Société Générale $1,650
Financing for 8 x Q-Flex LNG tankers (J5 = MOL, NYK, KKK, Mitsui & Co, Kaiun Kaisha, Qatar Gas Transport) Oct-05
Teekay LNG Calyon, KEXIM $880 Funding for 4 x LNG vessels under construction Oct-05
Aker American Shipping Fortis Capital $775
Senior secured credit facility to fund acquisition of 10 Jones Act product tanker under construction on BB to OSG Feb-07
Berlian Laju Undetermined $400 In market for loan to finance newbuilding acquisitions Jan-07
16
Thoresen Thai Société Générale $50-$60 Funding for 2 x handmax newbuildings Dec-06
Navibulgar Nord Bank $70 Funding for newbuilding program Dec-06
Nakilat Korea Export Insurance Co $225 Funding for 16-ship LNG newbuilding program Nov-06
Nakilat KEXIM $500 Funding for 16-ship LNG newbuilding program Nov-06
Nanjing Tanker Corporation
ICBC, Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of Communications, China Construction Bank $1,850
Funding for 4x VLCCs & 18x product tanker newbuilds delivered by Bohai Shipbuilding Oct-06
Nanjing Tanker Corporation Credit Agricole Indosuez $180 Funding for 2x VLCC newbuildings at Jiangnan Changxing Oct-06
Szczecin shipyard Agencja Rozwoju Przemyslu $81
Loans from Polish industrial-development agency done along with consortium of private banks Sep-06
Star Cruises BNP Paribas, Calyon, HSBC, Société Générale $1,700
Financing for two by 4,200 passenger newbuildings Sep-06
Diana Shipping Fortis $62
Construction financing for 2 x capesize bulkers from Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding w/ 2010 delivery Sep-06
Eitzen Chemical Nordea Circa $150 Financing for Songa acquisition Sep-06
Regional Container Lines DnB NOR $40 10-yr financing for 2 x 1,108 teu containership newbuildings Sep-06
KGs managed by Hellespont Hammonia HSH Nordbank, Exim Bank of China $86
Construction financing for 3 x 73,400 dwt product tankers bound for KGs Sep-06
China Shipping Container Lines
ICBC Bank as lead arranger, Agricultural Bank, China Merchant Bank, Shenzhen Development $186
10-yr yuan-denominated financing for 4 x containership newbuildings Aug-06
US Shipping Lehman Brothers, CIBC World Markets $350
Amendment to existing facility; upsized from $310 to $350m Aug-06
J.F. Lehman & Co BNP Paribas $155
LBO to finance acquisition of Atlantic Marine, comprising $35m revolver and $120m term loan; pricing expected around L+300 Jul-06
USS Product Investors Blackstone Group, Lehman Brothers $325
Conditional debt financing for US Shipping / NASSCO JV to fund construction of 9 x Jones Act product carriers Jul-06
Fesco HSH Nordbank $170 Financing for 3 x containership newbuildings, refi of existing debt Jul-06
JF Lehman & Co BNP Paribas $155 Financing for purchase of Atlantic Marine Jul-06
PT Apexindo Natexis, Goldman Sachs $120 10-year financing for construction of jack-up rig Jun-06
Awilco Offshore
Nordea as lead arranger, DnB NOR, Fokus Bank, Calyon, Deutsche Bank, HVB $670
Refinancing of existing $410m facility towards 7 x jack-up rigs and 2 x floatels Jun-06
Black Sea Shipping Management
European Bank for Reconstruction & Development $20
Financing for 5 x 5,500 dwt dry bulk newbuildings Jun-06
Gulf Energy Maritime Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank $100 Funding for 2 x panamax product tanker newbuildings from Hyundai Mipo May-06
Songa Shipholding Pte Nordea, SEB, Calyon, DVB, HVB $510
8-year term with pricing at L+85 for Blystad-controlled chemical carrier owner Apr-06
Shipping Corp of India KfW, Citigroup, Nordea $103 10-year financing for 1 of 2 x 319,000 dwt VLCC newbuildings Apr-06
17
Shipping Corp of India State Bank of India $103 10-year financing for 1 of 2 x 319,000 dwt VLCC newbuildings Apr-06
Eukor Car Carriers KDB $58 Bilateral loan with 3-yr pre and 15-yr post delivery tranches Apr-06
Qatar Gas Transport
SMBC as bookrunner, HSBC, Qatar National Bank, Commercial Bank of Qatar, Apicorp $500 9-year loan to fund LNG newbuildings Mar-06
Stocznia Szczecinska Nowa (SSN) Citibank, Bank Pekao, Nord LB $200
Polish shipyard takes out financing as state guarantees set to expire Mar-06
Deep Sea Supply Fortis $225 Funding for purchase of supply vessels from Hemen Holdings Mar-06
Aker Yards $151 Refinancing and upsizing of existed syndicated bank loan due 2011 Mar-06
Navantia Lloyds TSB as bookrunner, BBVA Euro 359
6.5-year syndicated bonding facility for Spanish state-owned military shipbuilder Feb-06
Trogir Zagrebacka Banka $28 Financing for busy production schedule and restructuring program of Croatian shipyard Feb-06
Korea Line
Citigroup as bookrunner, Bank of Nova Scotia, ING Bank, United Overseas Bank, Sumitomo $400 Financing for 2 x LNG newbuildings at L+50 Feb-06
Odfjell Invest DnB NOR $388 To fund acquisition of 6th generation semi-submersible drilling rig Feb-06
China Shipping Development Citibank, HSH Nordbank, DnB $52 Funding for company's shipbuilding plans Jan-06
Industrial Shipping Enterprises DVB $85 Debt financing for acquisition of 8-vessel fleet Jan-06
Viken LR2 A.S.
Bank of Scotland (agent/arranger), BNP Paribas, NIB Capital $167
Acquisition of 3 newbuild LR2 product tankers Jan-06
Export Finance
26. Structured finance programs for ships used by export credit agencies such as The Export-Import
Bank of Korea, or KEXIM, are largely typical asset-based finance, except that loan repayment relies on the
cash flow generated by the financed ships in addition to the first priority mortgage over the ships. Foreign
ship owners and their SPCs are eligible to borrow through such programs, which under OECD guidelines
may provide official export credits for up to 80% of the shipbuilding contract value as well as support for
interest during construction and fees. The repayment term of such a facility may extend up to 12 years
from the delivery date of the vessel and is amortized smoothly in equal installments over the term of the
loan. Due to the limitation on flexibility of repayment profile of export credits for ships, export credit
agencies such as KEXIM may co-operate with commercial banks when the borrower wishes to achieve a
more flexible repayment schedule. Bullet or balloon payment can be arranged through co-financing with
commercial banks and this customizes the debt profile for the borrower.
27. The Export-Import Bank of Korea, or KEXIM, is one of the most active shipbuilding finance
institutions in the world due to Korea’s leading role in the international shipbuilding industry. The
institution works in strict compliance to guidelines set by the OECD. In effect, KEXIM began to play
actively in the international ship financing market after Commercial Interest Reference Rates (CIRR) were
introduced in the Sector Understanding on Export Credits for Ships through the amendment of that
Understanding in 2002.
18
28. KEXIM was established in 1976 by the Eximbank Act with the mission of “facilitating the sound
development of the national economy and enhancing economic cooperation with foreign countries.” The
main job of KEXIM is “to extend financial support for export and import transactions, overseas investment
projects, development of natural resources overseas and trade finance. KEXIM also operates the Economic
Development Cooperation Fund (EDCF) and the Inter-Korea Cooperation Fund (IKCF) on behalf of the
Korean government.
29. The relationship between KEXIM and the Korean government is important as the government
provides the funds to cover any net losses on KEXIM underwritten loans, while KEXIM is actively
involved in high level policy making. The Korean government owns 60.1% of KEXIM while the Korean
Development Bank and the Bank of Korea each own 4.7% and 35.2%, respectively. KEXIM’s source of
funds comes from the government and from its own issuance of bonds in the domestic and international
capital markets.
30. Figure 10 shows the development of KEXIM’s commitments to shipping, while Figure 11 shows
how these break down by sector and by geographic region and Figure 12 lists shipbuilding deals closed by
KEXIM since 2003. Both the scale of these deals and the blue chip nature of many of the borrowers are
noteworthy.
31. In Figure 13 we move beyond KEXIM and look at other shipbuilding transaction financed by
export credit or development oriented institutions. Many of these also play an important role in the ship
financing industry. Most important to note are the Chinese institutions as the importance of Chinese yards
and the value of their collective orderbooks is growing at a breakneck pace.
Figure 10. KEXIM Shipping Commitments
$957
$4,016
$2,253 $2,301
$0
$500
$1,000
$1,500
$2,000
$2,500
$3,000
$3,500
$4,000
$4,500
2003 2004 2005 2006
US
$ m
illio
ns
Source: KEXIM.
19
Figure 11. Breakdown of Commitments
Containe
r
43%
Tanker
22%
LNG
26%
Other
9%Europe
47%Asia
41%
N.
America
12%
Source: KEXIM.
Figure 12. Ship Finance Deals Closed by KEXIM Since 2003
Year Borrower Amount (US$m) Additional Arrangers Assets
2003-2004 Danaos $127.9 None 2 containerships
2003-2004 Seaspan $246.6 Fortis Capital 9 containerships
2003-2004 Star Tanker $35.6 Woori Bank 1 VLCC
2003-2004 Danaos $135.0 Fortis Capital 2 containerships
2003-2004 Qatar Shipping Co. $156.3 CALYON 2 LPG carriers, 6 tankers
2003-2004 Prisco $122.8 Nordea Bank, Fortis Capital 3 ice-class tankers
2003-2004 Norfolkline $153.2 None 2 ropax vessels
2003-2004 Seaspan $303.2 Fortis Capital 7 containerships
2003-2004 Teekay $86.4 Fortis Capital 4 tankers
2003-2004 Hanjin Shipping $243.6 CALYON 2 containerships
2003-2004 MSC $188.0 BNP Paribas 4 containerships
2003-2004 Vroon Group B.V $108.0 Fortis Bank 6 product carriers
2003-2004 Great Eastern Shipping $49.2 Citicorp International 2 tankers
2003-2004 Teekay $127.8 Fortis Capital 4 tankers
2003-2004 AP-Moller Group $111.6 None 1 LNG vessel
2003-2004 OOCL $90.0 Fortis Bank 2 containerships
2003-2004 Tsakos Energy Navigation $126.7 Fortis Bank 4 tankers
2003-2004 Exmar $127.8 Citigroup 1 LNG vessel
2003-2004 CMA-CGM $379.0 CALYON 8 containerships
2003-2004 Shipping Corp of India $73.0 ANZ Bank 2 VLCCs
2003-2004 Korea Line Corp $37.1 KDB 1 bulk carrier
2003-2004 Novoship $134.7 CALYON 6 crude oil carriers
2003-2004 NYK $152.3 ANZ Bank 2 LNG vessels
2003-2004 Anangel Group $287.9 Citigroup 3 LNG vessels
2003-2004 Seaspan $129.8 Fortis Capital 2 containerships
2003-2004 AP-Moller $130.6 None 1 LNG vessel
2003-2004 Motia $61.1 CALYON 4 product tankers
2003-2004 Sovcomflot $70.8 CALYON 2 ice-class tankers
2003-2004 Teekay $299.6 CALYON 3 LNG vessels
2003-2004 Hyundai Merchant Marine $120.4 Société Générale 3 containerships
20
2005 Vroon $53.8 Fortis Capital 2 product tankers
2005 Teekay/QGTC $440.0 CALYON 4 LNG vessels
2005 P&O Nedlloyd $91.1 HSBC 3 containerships
2005 NITC $471.6 BNP Paribas 9 tankers
2005 Stena AB $185.0 Citigroup 1 drillship
2005 Hyundai Merchant Marine $310.5 Calyon, Woori Bank 4 containerships
2005 Exmar $85.0 DnB NOR 1 LNG vessel
2005 STX PanOcean $30.1 Calyon 2 tankers
2005 Great Eastern Shipping $46.3 Citigroup 2 product tankers
2005 Hyundai Merchant Marine $45.0 Nordea Bank 2 product tankers
2006 MSC $295.0 HSH Nordbank 4 containerships
2006 Stena AB $196.0 Citigroup 1 drillship
2006 Hanjin Shipping $70.0 Société Générale 4 containerships
2006 Korea Line Corp $50.0 Nordea Bank 4 containerships
2006 Hanjin Shipping $265.6 BNP, DnB, ING 5 containerships
2006 MSC $436.8 SMBC 6 containerships
2006 QGTC $500.0 CALYON 16 LNG vessels
2006 Safmarine $269.7 None 6 containerships
Total: $8,257.4
Source: KEXIM.
Figure 13. Selected Export & Development Finance Transactions
Borrower Lenders/Arrangers Amount (US$M) Purpose / Remarks Date
National Iranian Tanker Co China X-M Bank $370 5 x 300,000 dwt VLCCs - Guarantees
Mar-00
IM Skaugen Chinese Export Import Bank $32
Second 10 yr guarantee facility. 2 x 10,000 CBM LPG 4.95% on 75% gearing Aug-02
B+H European, Korean Banks $275 9 newbuildings, 6xMRs, 3xPanas Dec-02
Eisa Shipyard (Transpetro) BNDES (Brazil) $228 Proceeds will fund construction of 2x suezmax/2x aframax Jul-03
Seaspan
Fortis Capital Corp./Korea Export Import Bank on pari passu senior, Mezzanine in the market now, equity from Washington Group approx.$288
9 newbuildings ordered at about $40million apiece for a complete package of $360 million. KEXIM terms have to be OECD compliant
Aug-03
Hyundai Merchant Marine Korean Development Bank $450 Financing for five 7,000 TEU newbuilds
Aug-03
Qatar Shipping Company Credit Lyonnais, Korea Export Import Bank $223 Fleet expansion of 6 aframax newbuilds
Oct-03
Novoship KEXIM $130 CIRR Rate, 12 year term; Proceeds to finance 6x VLCCs at HHI 2004
Teekay Fortis, KEXIM $150 12-year deal, 80% leverage, 4x afra NBs - CIRR rate 2004
Teekay Shipping Calyon, KEXIM, DnB, ING, Nordea, RBS $468
Commercial tranche L+90, EXIM tranche L+40 2004
Exmar Citigroup, Nordea, KEXIM $160 CIRR rate, 12-year term, 1x LNG; 80% gearing 2004
Angelicoussis Interests Commercial tranche: Citigroup, DnB HSBC, BNP; Export credit: KEXIM $450 CIRR Rate, 12-year term, 3x LNG 2004
21
Hanjin Shipping SocGen, KDB $200 3 x 6500 TEU container @ $94.5m each for delivery in 2007 from HHI Jan-05
North-Western Shipping International Finance Corporation $42 Acquisition of up to 2 x dry bulk newbuildings May-05
Volga Shipping International Finance Corporation $47 Acquisition of up to 2 x dry bulk newbuildings May-05
Danaos Holding KEXIM $135 Fund purchase of 2 x 9600 TEU containerships from Samsung Aug-05
Teekay LNG Calyon, KEXIM $880 Funding for 4 x LNG vessels under construction Oct-05
Nakilat, Inc. Korea Export Insurance Co $225 Funding for 16-ship LNG newbuilding program Nov-06
Nakilat, Inc. KEXIM $500 Funding for 16-ship LNG newbuilding program Nov-06
Nanjing Tanker Corporation
ICBC, Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of Communications, China Construction Bank $1,850
Funding for 4x VLCCs & 18x product tanker newbuilds delivered by Bohai Shipbuilding Oct-06
Szczecin shipyard Agencja Rozwoju Przemyslu $81
Loans from Polish industrial-development agency done along with consortium of private banks Sep-06
KGs managed by Hellespont Hammonia HSH Nordbank, Exim Bank of China $86
Construction financing for 3 x 73,400 dwt product tankers bound for KGs Sep-06
China Shipping Container Lines
ICBC Bank as lead arranger, Agricultural Bank, China Merchant Bank, Shenzhen Development $186
10-yr yuan-denominated financing for 4 x containership newbuildings Aug-06
Black Sea Shipping Management
European Bank for Reconstruction & Development $20
Financing for 5 x 5,500 dwt dry bulk newbuildings Jun-06
Shipping Corp of India State Bank of India $103 10-year financing for 1 of 2 x 319,000 dwt VLCC newbuildings Apr-06
Eukor Car Carriers KDB $58 Bilateral loan with 3-yr pre and 15-yr post delivery tranches Apr-06
CMA CGM KEXIM, Calyon $676.0
8x 8,200 TEU container vessels; combined export credit with French tax lease Jan-05
OceanBlue Caterpillar $75 Credit line to assist Kjell Inge Rokke in its venture into US flag shipping Mar-05
Finance Companies, Hedge Funds and Other Non-bank Lenders
32. In addition to the commercial banks discussed above, non-bank lenders such as hedge funds
including Fortress Investments and industrial finance companies including Caterpillar Financial, GE
Capital, GMAC, AIG and Merrill Lynch Capital are also actively lending against vessels, although they
play a much smaller role than commercial banks in volume terms.
33. These non-bank lenders typically charge a higher rate of interest than traditional lenders and they
are therefore most active in financing deals that are not of interest to banks. Characteristics of these
transactions include older vessels, financially inferior borrowers, smaller vessels and sometimes those
registered in untraditional jurisdictions.
34. Although pricing of LIBOR+400 basis points appears high relative to credit terms offered by
commercial banks, finance and hedge fund companies are an important resource for borrowers with
smaller deals who have few choices and for whom the increased financing cost does not necessarily have a
meaningful economic impact on the project. These capital providers do not have any meaningful influence
on the new construction of vessels.
22
SAMPLE INDICATIVE FINANCE COMPANY PROPOSAL
Terms & Conditions
Purpose of Loan: 1 handymax bulk carrier
Acquisition Costs or Total Construction Costs
$40,000,000
Down Payment: 20% equivalent to US$8,000,000 Evidence of full down payment is required prior to any disbursements.
Financed Amount: The maximum Financed Amount shall not exceed the lesser of (i) US$32 000 000 (Thirty Two Million Dollars), (ii) 80% of the Fair Market Value as determined by Lender appointed surveyor, or (iii) 80% of total construction costs.
Currency of Funding and Repayment:
United States Dollars.
Loan Advance: Multiple advances per agreed upon milestones.
Project Anticipated Completion Date:
18 months from commencement of construction.
Country of Flag: Vessel(s) shall be documented and maintain registry under the laws of flag acceptable to Lender
Location of Vessel Use:
International
Vessel Classification: Classification society acceptable to Lender.
Interest Rate
Construction: Permanent:
Variable One Month LIBOR Rate plus 4.50% per annum, adjusted monthly. OR Fixed Rate of H15 10-year swap rate plus 7.38% per annum, to be fixed approximately one week prior to funding. Variable One Month LIBOR Rate plus 4.00% per annum commencing after the conversion date adjusted monthly thereafter. OR Fixed Rate of H15 10-year swap rate plus 6.88% per annum, to be fixed approximately one week prior to funding.
Repayment Construction Loan: Permanent Loan:
Monthly Interest Only. First payment due on the 1st
day of the 2nd calendar month following funding. Monthly equal principal payments with accrued interest, payable in arrears from the conversion date based on an amortization period of 96 months. The maturity date is the last day of the principal payment term of 96 months beginning one month prior to the first principal payment date. All outstanding amounts (including any balloon) due
at the maturity date. First payment due on the 1st
day of the 2nd calendar month following the conversion date.
Fees: Lender’s commitment to finance any amounts under the Loan is contingent upon receipt of a non-refundable commitment fee of 1.0% of the Financed Amount.
Guarantor(s): Special Purpose Entity formed to own vessel
Prepayment Penalty Construction: Permanent:
3% non-conversion fee. 3%, 2%, 1% and 1% thereafter per year.
23
Special Conditions:
• Pledge of additional collateral vessels from existing fleet as required by
Lender. • Assignment of construction contracts • Assignment of term charter or any bareboat charter. • Escrow arrangement may be required by Lender for deposit of charter
proceeds into a restricted account that establishes a waterfall to make loan payments and then disburse proceeds to Borrower
Taxes and Expenses:
Borrower shall pay all fees, taxes (including any applicable withholding taxes), language translation expenses, surveyor expenses, duties and expenses (including any outside legal expenses) incurred by Lender.
Insurance Terms:
• Builder’s Risk (if Lender is providing construction financing) • Hull and Machinery • Protection and Indemnity • Pollution • War Risks (if not included in the above) • Breach of Warranty / Mortgagee Interest Insurance (MII) • All coverages in form, substance, and amounts acceptable to Lender • Other insurance as Lender may require
SECURITY INTEREST: During the vessel construction period, Lender shall be granted a first
lien/mortgage on the Vessel(s). Any other documentation deemed necessary by Lender to secure its interest
in the Vessel(s) under construction shall be required. During the permanent financing period, a first
preferred ship mortgage in the Vessel(s) shall be required as security. Additional security may be required
by the Lender as deemed necessary.
High Yield Bonds
35. High yield bonds or “notes” are generally defined as those bonds or notes issued by a non-
investment grade borrower as defined by the credit analysis conducted by agencies such as Standard &
Poors, Moody’s Investor Services, Fitch and others. These financial instruments, which are used most
actively in the United States and Norway but are also present in Asia, are an important source of ship
financing.
36. High yield bonds play an important role in the capital structure of many shipping companies
because they offer companies the ability to access leverage that is higher than that available in the
commercial bank market and do so without suffering the ownership dilution that comes with selling equity.
As you can see from the pricing outlined in Figures 15, 16 and 17, pricing for high yield bonds falls in the
broad range outlined above.
37. During the period from 1997-1999, shipping companies issued approximately $3 billion of high
yield bonds. Of the 25 bond offerings that were successfully completed during this period, 19 defaulted or
were restructured. The largest of the defaulted transactions was Golden Ocean Group Limited, which used
the proceeds of its high yield bond to finance the equity portion of its extensive VLCC newbuilding
program. Major oil companies have also used the bond market as a source of financing. Examples of such
transactions include Golden State Petroleum, Windsor Petroleum and California Petroleum. A selection of
high yield bond deals that we view as relevant to the international shipping industry are outlined in
Figure 17.
24
38. There were several reasons that resulted in the relatively high percentage of deals that defaulted
or required restructuring and principal reduction including:
1. Overage Vessels – many of the transactions that were concluded featured older vessels which
suffer the most in market downturns and sometimes need to be scrapped.
2. Asian Financial Crisis – what began as the devaluation of the Thai Baht in 1997 quickly
spread to a financial crisis throughout Asia which reduced demand for shipping services and
caused charter rates and vessel values to collapse
3. Vessels that did not have long term employment with financially stable counter parties –
many of the vessels financed through the proceeds of bond offering were traded in the spot
market or were on charter to financially weak counter parties that did not honour their charter
obligations.
4. Over-leveraged Balance Sheets – many of which were comprised of relatively expensive
bonds rather than a mix of commercial bank debt and bonds.
5. Lack of Sponsor Support – many of the high yield bonds concluded in the reference period
were on a “project” basis whereby the issuers offered certain assets into the transaction but
did not offer, nor were they required to provide, recourse to other assets and resources.
39. There are several major differences between traditional commercial bank debt and high yield
bonds including:
Term
40. High yield bonds tend to be longer in duration (years) than traditional bank debt. The average
length of a high yield bond is approximately 10 years irrespective of vessel age, versus an average of
7-10 years for traditional commercial bank loans.
Amortization
41. High yield bonds are generally non-amortizing, which means that issuers are responsible for
paying “Interest Only” during the life of the bond. The repayment of principal comes at the maturity of the
bond, called a “bullet”, at which time the entire principal balance must be repaid. The exception to this rule
is high yield bond offerings that feature a “sinking fund” whereby issuers repay a portion of the principal
during the life of the loan.
25
Figure 14. Shipping Bond Issuance Since 1993
$0
$5,000
$10,000
$15,000
$20,000
$25,000
$30,000
$35,000
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Cu
mu
lati
ve Issu
an
ce (
US
$
millio
ns)
$0
$1,000
$2,000
$3,000
$4,000
$5,000
$6,000
$7,000
$8,000
An
nu
al Is
su
an
ce (
US
$ m
illi
on
s)
Cumulative Issuance Annual Issuance
Source: Marine Money International.
Covenants
42. High yield bonds typically have less stringent covenants than traditional bank loans. Covenants in
high yield bond offerings are generally referred to as “incurrence covenants” which means the breach of
covenants is the result of an action or actions taken by the issuer as opposed to “occurrence” covenants
which can be triggered by events in the marketplace and which are featured in commercial bank loans as
described above.
Figure 15. Shipping/Offshore High Yield Bonds in Norway: 1Q-3Q06
Issuer Curr. Amount Maturity Settlement Fixed / FRN Spread (Coupon)
Shadow Rating (bond) Security
DDI HOLDING AS (Sinvest) USD 280,000,000 6 19.01.06 FIXED Swap+450 (9.3%) na 1st pr. Pledge
DEEP SEA SUPPLY NOK 200,000,000 5 23.01.06 FRN Nibor+300 na 2nd pr. Pledge
REVUS ENERGY ASA NOK 300,000,000 5 24.01.06 FRN Nibor+400 B Unsecured
SEVAN MARINE ASA USD 50,000,000 5 31.01.06 FIXED Swap+500 (9.75%) B
2nd pr. Pledge in shares
EIDSIVA REDERI ASA NOK 100,000,000 5 03.02.06 FRN Nibor+375 na Unsecured
ALTINEX OIL ASA NOK 300,000,000 5 09.02.06 FIXED Swap+580 (9.5%) B- 1st pr. Pledge
PETROLIA DRILLING ASA NOK 500,000,000 5 15.02.06 FIXED Swap+700 (10.75%) CCC Unsecured
ODFJELL ASA NOK 400,000,000 5 17.02.06 FRN Nibor+80 BB Unsecured
AWILCO OFFSHORE USD 100,000,000 5 28.02.06 FIXED Swap+475 (9.75%) na Unsecured
DNO ASA NOK 200,000,000 5 02.03.06 FRN Nibor+250 na Unsecured
DDI HOLDING AS (Sinvest) USD 160,000,000 6 15.03.06 FRN 6m Libor+475 na 1st pr. Pledge
DDI HOLDING AS (Sinvest) NOK 400,000,000 6 15.03.06 FIXED Swap+585 (10.0%) CCC 2nd pr. Pledge
SONGA OFFSHORE USD 75,000,000 5 24.03.06 FIXED Swap+460 (9.75%) CCC+ 2nd pr. Pledge
AKER YARDS ASA NOK 480,000,000 7 05.04.06 FRN Nibor+250 na Unsecured
26
AKER YARDS ASA NOK 120,000,000 7 05.04.06 FIXED Swap+250 (6.65%) na Unsecured
OFFSHORE RIG SERVICES ASA USD 200,000,000 5 27.04.06 FIXED Swap+435 (9.75%) CCC+ 2nd pr. Pledge
DDI HOLDING AS (Sinvest) USD 140,000,000 6 26.04.06 FIXED Swap+375 (9.3%) na 1st pr. Pledge
OCEAN RIG ASA USD 250,000,000 5 03.04.06 FRN Libor+400 B- Unsecured
SOLSTAD NOK 300,000,000 5 19.05.06 FRN Nibor+85 na Unsecured
PETROMENA AS NOK 2,000,000,000 6 24.05.06 FIXED Swap+540 (9.75%) na 2nd pr. Pledge
PETROJACK ASA USD 200,000,000 6 30.05.06 FRN Libor+490 (6m) na 1st pr. Pledge
PETROJACK ASA NOK 500,000,000 6 30.05.06 FRN Nibor+625 na 2nd pr. Pledge
DOF ASA NOK 300,000,000 5 13.06.06 FRN Nibor+105 BB- Unsecured
I.M. SKAUGEN USD 100,000,000 3 19.06.06 FRN Libor+180 BB- Unsecured
PA RESOURCES AB USD 100,000,000 5 20.06.06 FIXED Swap+435 (10.0%) na
2nd pr. Pledge in shares
GEOPARD AS (ALTINEX) NOK 660,000,000 6 22.06.06 FIXED Swap+740 (12.0%) na Unsecured
BELSHIPS ASA NOK 100,000,000 5 04.07.06 FRN Nibor+350 B Unsecured
INTEROIL E&P USD 20,000,000 5 11.07.06 FIXED Swap+450 (9.0%) na Unsecured
SEABIRD EXPLORATION LTD. NOK 150,000,000 3 14.07.06 FRN Nibor+425 na Unsecured
DNA ASA (tap) NOK 100,000,000 4.5 18.08.06 FRN Nibor+250 na Unsecured
VOLSTAD MARITIME AS NOK 150,000,000 6 01.09.06 FRN Nibor+900 B- 2nd pr. Pledge
NEPTUNE MARINE INVEST AS USD 150,000,000 3 05.09.06 FRN Libor+550 na 1st pr. Pledge
APL ASA NOK 500,000,000 5 20.09.06 FRN Nibor+275 na Unsecured
MPF Corp Ltd USD 100,000,000 5 20.09.06 FRN Libor+675 na 2nd pr. Pledge
DEEPOCEAN NOK 300,000,000 3 25.09.06 FRN Nibor+165 BB- Unsecured
OCEANTEAM P&U NOK 420,000,000 4 27.09.06 FRN Nibor+650 CCC+ 1st pr. Pledge
THULE DRILLING USD 130,000,000 3 28.09.06 FIXED 12.0% na
COLOR GROUP ASA (tap) NOK 125,000,000 7 29.09.06 FRN Nibor+130 BB+/BBB- Unsecured
EITZEN CHEMICALS NOK 490,000,000 5 04.10.06 FRN Nibor+350 B Unsecured
EITZEN CHEMICALS USD 25,000,000 5 04.10.06 FRN Libor+350 B Unsecured
DAVIE YARD NOK 90,000,000 1.5 15.10.06 FIXED Nibor+800 (12.0%) na 1st pr. Pledge
Figure 16. Jefferies High Yield Shipping Bond Prices
SHIPPING Ask YTW STW Maturity Ratings Call Dt Call Px Out
Altus Group Ltd (ALTGRP)
11% Secured Notes due '13 103.000 10.01% 547 04/01/13 – / – 04/01/10 105.500 40
Britannia Bulk PLC (BBPLC)
11% Senior Secured Notes due '11 102.500 10.14% 557 12/01/11 B3 / B- 12/01/09 106.375 185
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock (GLDD)
7.75% Sr Sub Notes due '13 99.500 7.85% 328 12/15/13 Caa1 / CCC+ 12/15/08 103.875 175
Horizon Lines Llc (HRZ)
9% Senior Notes due '12 108.750 5.68% 90 11/01/12 B3 / CCC+ 11/01/08 104.500 197
11% Sr Discount Nts due '13 100.000 6.17% 127 04/01/13 Caa1 / CCC+ 04/01/08 105.500 104
International Shipholding (ISH)
7.75% Senior Notes due '07 101.000 5.28% 32 10/15/07 Caa1 / B- NC NC 40
Navios Maritime (NAVIOS)
9.5% Senior Notes due 2014 106.000 8.14% 359 12/15/14 B3 / B 12/15/10 104.750 300
27
Sea Containers (SCRA)
10.75% Senior Notes due '06 95.000 10/15/06 WR / NR 115
7.875% Senior Notes due '08 93.000 02/15/08 WR / NR 06/11/07 100.000 150
10.5% Senior Notes due '12 94.000 05/15/12 WR / – 05/15/08 105.250 101
Stena AB (STENA)
7.5% Senior Notes due '13 102.500 6.84% 229 11/01/13 Ba3 / BB- 11/01/08 103.750 175
7% Senior Notes due '16 100.500 6.89% 234 12/01/16 Ba3 / BB- 12/01/09 103.500 250
Trailer Bridge (TRBR)
9.25% Secured due '11 104.000 7.92% 335 11/15/11 B3 / B- 11/15/08 104.625 85
SUPPLY VESSELS Ask YTW STW Maturity Ratings Call Dt Call Px Out
Gulfmark Offshore (GMRK)
7.75% Senior Notes due '14 103.000 7.04% 250 07/15/14 B1 / B 07/15/09 103.875 159
Hornbeck Offshore Services (HOS)
6.125% Senior Notes due '14 96.750 6.68% 209 12/01/14 Ba3 / BB- 12/01/09 103.063 225
Seabulk International (SBLK)
9.5% Senior Notes due '13 109.000 5.66% 83 08/15/13 Ba1 / BBB- 08/15/08 104.750 150
7.2% Seacor Senior Notes due '09 102.750 5.92% 128 09/15/09 Ba1 / BBB- any time 150
5 7/8% Seacor Senior Notes due '12 99.000 6.09% 154 10/01/12 Ba1 / BBB- any time 200
Secunda International (SECUND)
L+800 Secured Notes due '12 104.250 09/01/12 B2 / B- 06/11/07 104.000 125
TANKERS Ask YTW STW Maturity Ratings Call Dt Call Px Out
Berlian Laju Tanker
7.5% Senior Notes due '14 100.875 7.32% 276 05/15/14 – / BB- 05/15/12 103.750 400
Golden State Petro (GOLDEN)
8.04% 1St Mortgage due '19 106.787 7.17% 253 02/01/19 Baa2 / BB+ any time MW + 37.5 127
OMI Corp. (OMM)
7.625% Senior Notes due '13 103.500 6.72% 217 12/01/13 B1 / BB 12/01/08 103.813 200
Overseas Shipholding Group (OSG)
8.25% Senior Notes due '13 105.250 6.56% 164 03/15/13 Ba1 / BB+ 03/15/08 104.125 200
8.75% Debentures due '13 111.500 6.56% 199 12/01/13 Ba1 / BB+ any time MW 85
7.5% Senior Notes due '24 103.500 7.14% 245 02/15/24 Ba1 / BB+ NC NC 150
Ship Finance International Ltd. (SHIPFI)
8.5% Senior Notes due '13 104.000 7.45% 291 12/15/13 B1 / B+ 12/15/08 104.250 426
Titan Petrochemicals (TITAN)
8.5% Senior Secured Notes due '12 97.750 9.08% 454 03/18/12 B2 / B any time MW + 100 400
Teekay (TK)
8.875% Senior Notes due '11 108.000 6.64% 209 07/15/11 Ba3 / BB- any time MW + 50 263
Ultrapetrol Limited (ULTR)
9% 1St Mortgage due '14 102.000 8.54% 399 11/24/14 B2 / B 11/24/09 104.500 180
US Shipping Partners (USS)
13% Secured due '14 0.000 10.63% 606 08/15/14 Caa1 / B- 02/15/11 106.500 100
Neither the information nor any prices provided herein should be construed to be or constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities represented herein.
Pricing information contained herein is based on data obtained from others.
Source: Jefferies & Company.
28
Figure 17. Selected Shipping Bond Issues
Company Bank(s) / Advisor(s)
Amount (US$M)
Interest Rate Maturity Purpose / Remarks Date
American Commercial Paine-Webber $13 Bond-Title XI Apr-92
American Commercial Lines Paine-Webber $3 Bond-Title XI Dec-92
Matson Navigation JP Morgan $55 25 years Title XI bond Jul-03
Pertamina Citigroup, PT Bahana $90
12%-12.625% N/A Newbuilding Finance Sep-03
North Western Shipping & Volga Shipping
International Finance Corp. (IFC) $100mm Not known
10-12 year term
Fleet renewal program 2004
Yang Ming Unknown $231 2014 Newbuilding financing 2004
Tote (Saltchuck) JP Morgan $60 LIBOR + 4 12-year MARAD Title XI 2004
Matson JP Morgan $55 5.270% 25-year Title XI 2004
Titan Petrochemicals Morgan Stanley $400 8.50% 2012 Grow & renew tanker fleet Mar-05
COSCO $274 Fixed 2015 & 2025
Fund bulk & tanker newbuildings Oct-05
Aker Yards Pareto Securities, DnB NOR Markets $91
NIBOR + 2.50% 2013
Acquisition funding, refinancing Mar-06
US Shipping
Lehman Brothers, CIBC World Markets $100 13.00% 2014
Funding for construction project Aug-06
Hellenic Seaways Natexis Banques Populaires $38 2016
Convertible issue to fund fast ferry construction Sep-06
Nakilat, Inc. Lehman Brothers $850 30-y T + 145 2033 Secured bond issue Nov-06
Nakilat, Inc. Lehman Brothers $300 30-y T + 165 2033 Subordinated debt issue Nov-06
Vinashin Habubank $19 9.60% 2008 Funding for export shipbuilding projects Nov-06
Odfjell Asia II Pte DBS Bank $33 4.15% 2011 Guaranteed by Odfjell Dec-06
Odfjell Asia II Pte DBS Bank $72 Floating at + 0.88 2011
Priced over 6-mo SGD swap offer rate Dec-06
Sevan Marine Pareto Securities $140 9.25% 2011 FPSO construction financing Dec-06
Exmar $65 3.00% 2011 Fully subscribed by SOFINA SA Jan-07
Prisco Nordea $73 3-mo L/N+3.6% 2011
General corporate purposes, to include funding for newbuilding program Feb-07
Sea Production Pareto, Nordea $130 3-mo L + 4.25% 2012
Senior secured for new Fredriksen FPSO venture Feb-07
Source: Marine Money International.
29
II. Public & Private Equity
Public Equity
43. The fourth quarter of 2003 marked the start of a robust period of global equity offerings by
shipping companies as illustrated in Figure 18. There were two main drivers for this increased equity
issuance. First, the strong shipping market was able to produce high current income during a period of low
interest rates. By structuring transactions to provide dividend yield, shipping companies and their private
equity sponsors were able to achieve valuations based on cash flow multiples in the public market which
were in excess of the value of their vessels thereby creating a valuation arbitrage opportunity.
44. In addition to providing income, shipping companies were viewed by investors as having the
potential for capital appreciation. In particular, some investors viewed shipping as a proxy for the robust
growth of industrial production in China. Through shipping, some investors attempted to gain exposure to
the Chinese economy while having hard assets and avoiding regulatory landscape. Figure 18 demonstrates
the magnitude of growth in shipping investment by public investors. Meanwhile Figure 19 gives an
indication of just how much shipping IPO money gets invested into newbuildings and
Figure 18. Shipping Equity & Equity-Linked Offerings (2000 – Present)
$313 $395$853 $1,056
$3,513
$6,999
$5,757
$0
$1,000
$2,000
$3,000
$4,000
$5,000
$6,000
$7,000
$8,000
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Am
ount ra
ised (
US
$ m
illio
ns)
U.S. listings Other listings
26%116%
24%
233%
99%
-18%
KI Source: Citigroup, Marine Money International.
30
Figure 19. Shipping IPOs & Investment in Newbuildings
Company Newbuilding Investment
2005 IPOs
Diana Shipping No
Courage Marine No
Seaspan Yes
Genco No
STX Pan Ocean Yes
Trico Marine No
Eagle Bulk Shipping No
StealthGas No
TBS International No
Double Hull Tankers No
Quintana Maritime No
American Commercial Lines No
DryShips No
Aries Maritime No
Horizon Lines No
Cosco Yes
Teekay LNG Yes
2006 IPOs
Teekay Offshore Partners Yes*
Aegean Marine Petroleum Yes
Chemoil No
China Merchants Energy Shipping No
Marenave No
Berlian Laju Tankers No
Danaos Corporation Yes
Ocean Tankers No
Ultrapetrol No
Eitzen Chemical Yes
Lloyds Fonds fund No
Gulf Navigation Yes
Pacific Shipping Trust No
Omega Navigation Yes*
Goldenport No
*Purchase options only
Private Equity
45. Due to a combination of the inefficiency of the process of raising this capital, the historically
single digit financial returns generated by shipping and the scrutiny on valuation and corporate structure,
institutional private equity has so far not been a meaningful source of capital for the shipping industry.
31
46. New York investment bank Dahlman Rose & Company estimates that approximately 2% of the
approximately $1 trillion currently under management by private equity funds has been deployed into the
transportation industry, with a small amount devoted to shipping. The transactions that have been
completed involve one or more of the following categories:
Management Buy-Out (MBO) – a form of acquisition where the company’s existing
managers bring in a financial partner/private equity fund to help them buy or acquire a large
part of the company from its owners.
Backing a Proven Management Team & Timing the Market – this structure typically involves
an outside provider of equity making a commitment to finance transactions generated by a
management team.
Leveraged Buy-Out (LBO) – an outside investor essentially uses the assets of the target
company as collateral for loans used to buy the company.
Public/Private Arbitrage – private equity funds provide the capital necessary to create a
shipping company of sufficient scale which that it can later be taken public.
47. In looking at the Selected Private Equity Deals in Shipping table shown in Figure 20, we are able
to draw some basic conclusions about the nature of these transactions outlined below. First off, it is clear
that private equity is not typically used for newbuilding projects for the same reason that public equity is
not used often for newbuilding projects – the length of time between vessel order and vessel delivery puts a
strain on cashflow and reduces the ability to use leverage to achieve desired financial returns. There are a
few exceptions to this such as the investment that Maas Capital made in Diana Shipping and the
investment that FS Private Capital made in Pacific Basin in 1999. Both deals, however, were based on the
idea of market timing and both companies have since been taken public in New York and Hong Kong,
respectively. A more recent example of a cargo company being sold to a private equity fund is the sale of
heavylift specialist Dockwise by Heerema and Wilhelmsen to UK based private equity fund 3i for
approximately $800 million.
Figure 20. Selected Private Equity Deals in Shipping
Target Company Target's Activity Profile Type Investor Seller
Closing Date
Enterprise
Value
Atlantic Marine US Shipyard Regional - US Buy-out J.F. Lehman William Gibbs 2005 $190,000,000
Cavan Maritime Dry Cargo Shipping International IPO ramp up
Wexford Capital None 2005
Circa $150,000,000
Moby Car/passenger ferries Regional - Italy Minority Clessidra Vincent Onorato 2006 N/A
Commodore Group
Ferry UK-Channel Islands (Condor) Regional - UK Buy-out ABN Amro Norman family 2002 N/A
Dart Line 1 terminal, 4x Ro-ros Regional - UK Buy-out Montauban (Coblefret) Bidvest 2006 $111,000,000
Diana Shipping Dry Cargo Shipping International IPO ramp up Maas Capital Simeon Palios 1999 $20,000,000
Dockwise Heavy Transport Shipping International Buy-out 3i Private Equity
Heerema (76%) /Wilhelmsen (24%) 2006 $800,000,000
DP USA Assets Seaports Regional - US Buy-out
AIG Private Equity Dubai Ports 2006 $700,000,000
Eagle Bulk Shipping Dry Cargo Shipping International IPO ramp up Kelso & Co. None 2005 $130,000,000
Genco Shipping Dry Cargo Shipping International IPO ramp up Oaktree Capital None 2005 $403,000,000
Grand Naval Veloci Italian Sea Transport Regional - Italy Minority Permira Grimali 2004 $520,000,000
32
Grand Naval Veloci Italian Sea Transport Regional - Italy Buy-out
Investitori Associati, De Agostini, Charme Investment
Permira(80%) Grimaldi (20%) 2006 $900,000,000
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Dredging Regional - US Buy-out
Madison Dearborn Sam Zell 2003 $382,000,000
Hawaiian Fast Ferry
Ferry Service- Hawaiian Islands Regional - US Restructuring JF Lehman US Government 2005 $235,000,000
Heidmar Tanker pools/Lightering/terminals
Regional - US/International Buy-out
Morgan Stanley
Per Heidenreich/Economou 2006 $200,000,000
Horizon Lines Container Shipping (U.S.) Regional - US IPO ramp up Castle Harlan Carlyle Group 2004 $403,000,000
Inchcape Ship agency International Buy-out Istithmar Electra 2006 $285,000,000
Inchcape Ship agency International Buy-out Electra Investments Management 1999 $60,000,000
Isle of Man Steam Packet Ferry Service Regional - UK Buy-out
Montagu Private Equity Sea Containers 2003 $251,000,000
Isle of Man Steam Packet Ferry Service Regional - UK Sponsor sale Macquarie Montague Private Equity 2006 $397,000,000
K-Sea Transpotation Tug & Barge Regional - US MBO
FS Private Equity Eklof Family 1999 $216,000,000
Lower Lakes Dry Cargo Shipping/Brown Water Regional - US SPAC buyer
Rand Acquisition Lower Lakes Towing 2005 $53,000,000
MTMM Chemical Tankers International Buy-out Varde Partners McShane Family 2007 $425,000,000
Northland Services Tug & Barge
Regional - US/Canada MBO
Endeavor Capital Sterling Partners 2004 $100,000,000
Oceania Cruise Cruise International IPO ramp up Apollo Group
French banks/Frank Del Rio/US Investors 2007 $850,000,000
OOCL Terminals Regional - US Buy-out
Ontario Teachers Pension OOCL 2006 $2,350,000,000
Quintana Maritime Dry Cargo Shipping International IPO ramp up First Reserve None 2005 $150,000,000
Red Funnel Car/passenger ferries Regional - UK Buy-out JP Morgan Capital Associated British Ports 2005 $127,800,000
Scanlines Danish Ferries Regional - Scandanavia Buy-out Macquarie / 3i
German/Danish Government 2006 $2,000,000,000
Seaspan Container Shipping International Start-up Washington Group None 2005 $747,000,000
Serimer Dasa Pipeline welding International Buy-out Lime Rock Partners Stolt Nielsen 2004 $40,000,000
Simon Group Sea Terminal, Port Sutton Bridge Regional - UK Buy-out
Montauban (Coblefret) Utilico/public investors 2006 $96,000,000
SNCM Ferry Ferry Service- Mediterranean
Regional - France Restructuring
Butler Capital/Veolia France 2006 $212,000,000
US Shipping Refined Petroleum Products Regional - US MBO Sterling Partners Amerada Hess 2002 $250,000,000
V Ships Ship management International Minority Close Brothers Vlasov Group 2003 $68,000,000
Wallem Group Ship management International Steckmest/Hill Calendonia Investments 2006 $62,400,000
WightLink Shipping
Ferry Service- UK to Isle of Wight Regional - UK Buy-out Macquarie CinVen (Management) 2005 $450,000,000
WightLink Shipping
Ferry Service - UK to Island of Wight Regional - UK Buy-out CinVen (MBO) Sea Containers 1994 N/A
33
Private to Public Arbitrage
48. One of the themes that runs through the data that appears in the table is that private equity
investors do not appear to have the appetite to invest in bulk shipping assets, unless such investment is
made as part of strategy to sell assets in the capital markets and thereby profit from a valuation arbitrage as
described in the paragraph above.
Regional Markets
49. Another clear trend in private equity for marine related assets is focused on markets with a high
barrier to entry. This barrier is created through local laws that restrict a particular domestic trade, so called
“cabotage”, such as the Jones Act in America. Investors have demonstrated a belief that local laws, such as
the requirement to build ships domestically, offer a barrier to entry and a high asset replacement cost that
insulate the market from the oversupply of tonnage in the absence of fluctuation of vessel supply.
Infrastructure – Franchises
50. In recent years we have seen private equity funds develop an appetite for infrastructure and
logistics related investments, which are widely considered to provide a long term and stable return, most
notably led by the Macquarie Infrastructure Fund. This interest in infrastructure has manifested itself in the
marine industry primarily through the sale of ferry businesses and ports and terminal operations. The most
high profile example of this in the ports and terminals business is the sale of the former P&O Ports
facilities in the United States by Dubai Ports World to the private equity arm of AIG International. In
addition, the Ontario Teacher Pension Plan agreed to buy the U.S. port holdings of Hong Kong based
Orient Overseas Container Lines for $2.35 billion.
51. Another area of activity for private equity is the marine services sector, which saw the sale
leading ship managers V.Ships and Wallem, ship agency Inchcape and tanker pool operator Heidmar,
which was sold to Morgan Stanley for approximately $225 million.
52. A list of selected equity deals, both public and private, with implications for shipbuilding is
provided in Figure 21.
Figure 21. Selected Shipping Equity Transactions
Issuer Underwriters / Advisors Amount (US$ M) Structure / Pricing / Comments Date
Hellenic Shipyard Planned IPO in Athens Dec-00
OMI None $28 Private placement to KG Jebsen for 2 x suezmax NBs
Jan-01
United States Marine Repair Lehman, CSFB, Bear Sterns, Credit Lyonnais $140
IPO in New York - pulled due to acquisition by UDI May-02
Daewoo JP Morgan $225 15% stake in Daewoo Shipbuilding sold Jun-03
OceanBlue DnB NOR, Jefferies $288
Kjell Inge Rokke’s Philadelphia Kvaerner shipyard attempt to enter US flag liner market through private equity deal Feb-05
American Shipbuilding Corp DnB NOR, Jefferies $75
Company formed to offer ownership shares in Kvaerner Philadelphia Shipyard as way to fund investment in yard Mar-05
American Shipbuilding Corp DnB NOR, Enskilda Undetermined Mandated to raise equity to help fund first ships in OSG's 10-ship, $1 billion order Apr-05
34
Aker American Shipping DnB NOR Markets, Enskilda Securities $125
Oslo private placement at NOK 18-22 to raise funds to acquire the Kvaerner Philadelphia Shipyard and 10 Jones Act product tankers being built for OSG deal Jun-05
PetroMENA (Berge Larsen) ABG Sundal Collier, Fearnley Fonds $81
Private placement in Oslo to help fund rig order; 3x oversubscribed in just 6 hours Sep-05
Maritrans UBS as bookrunner, Cantor, Merrill, Morgan Keegan Circa $110
NYSE secondary offering pursuant to September shelf registration to fund debt repayment, new constructions and reconstructions and for general corporate purposes Dec-05
SeaDrill Ltd. Carnegie, Pareto $747
Private placement of 75,000,000 new shares at NOK66/share to fund acquisition of Smedvig & finance contracted rig Jan-06
Sevan Pareto Securities ASA $230 Financing for construction of drilling unit Feb-06
Odfjell Drilling DnB NOR $140
Private placement to fund acquisition of 6th generation semi-submersible drilling rig; 10x oversubscribed Feb-06
Yantai Raffles Fearnley Fonds $150 Planned Oslo and possible Singapore listing by Chinese shipbuilder Apr-06
USS Product Investors Blackstone Group, Lehman Brothers $105
Conditional private equity financing for US Shipping / NASSCO JV to fund construction 9 x Jones Act product carriers Jul-06
Gulf Navigation
SHUAA Capital, National Bank of Abu Dhabi, Emirates Bank $248
Dubai IPO of 55% stake in tanker owner; proceeds to fund fleet expansion Aug-06
Eitzen Chemical Carnegie, Pareto $20
Offering of 4,700,000 new shares concurrent with listing of issued shares on Oslo Borse Oct-06
Danaos Corporation Merrill Lynch, Citigroup $215 IPO on NYSE of 10,250,000 shares at $21 each, midpoint of range Oct-06
Eitzen Chemical Carnegie, Pareto $302
Equity placement to raise funds for Songa acquisition; to be spun off from Camillo Eitzen into separate Oslo-listed company with chemical tanker focus Oct-06
China Merchants Energy Shipping China International Capital Corp. $566
Shanghai IPO of 1.2 billion 'A' shares for expansion of tanker fleet and LNG vessels Nov-06
Exmar
KBC Securities as bookrunner, Fortis as selling agent $96
Private placement of 3,200,000 new shares to professional & institutional investors at E23.5 per share Nov-06
Star Cruises CIMB-GK Securities $228 Hong Kong rights issue by Malaysian cruise operator to fund 3 newbuildings Dec-06
Sealift Pareto, Carnegie, Fearnley Fonds $180
Oslo private placement in advance of listing of Fredriksen heavy-lift entity Jan-07
Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPAC)
53. As a result of the robust shipping markets, there have been a number of untraditional products
offered by the U.S. capital markets to the shipping industry. In the fourth quarter of 2004, Angeliki
Frangou concluded the first “blank check company”, also called a Special Purpose Acquisition Company
(SPAC) for a shipping company. Since that time four more shipping SPACs have been completed and thus
far of the $1 billion of capital that has been formed not a single dollar has been used to fund newbuilding
vessels.
35
Figure 22. Maritime & Logistics Blank Check Equity Issues
Issuer Underwriters / Advisors Amount (US$ M) Structure / Pricing / Comments Date
International Shipping Enterprises Sunrise Securities $196 Funds raised through sale of 17m units at $6 each Dec-04
Star Maritime Acquisition Corp
Maxim Group, EarlyBirdCapital as underwriters, Hellenic Millenium $200 Blank check IPO Dec-05
Global Logistics Acquisition Corp BB&T Capital Markets $88
Blank check company formed to target cross section of transport & logistics companies Mar-06
Energy Infrastructure Acquisition Corp. Maxim Group LLC, Ferris, Banker Watts $203 Blank check IPO in New York Jul-06
Shipping SPACs
Acquiring or Reverse Merging Entity Advisors Amount (US$ M) Target or Nature of Combination Date
FreeSeas Inc. (formerly Adventure Holdings) Poseidon Capital Up to $62
Public listing through merger with SPAC Trinity Holdings May-05
International Shipping Enterprises
Lazard for seller, HSH Gudme Corp Finance for buyer $608 Navios Corp. Aug-05
Euroseas (Pittas) Poseidon Capital, Roth Capital $21
Private placement by new company formed by reverse merger of Eurobulk into Cove Apparel Sep-05
Rand Acquisition Corp NatCity Investments, Macquarie $54 Lower Lakes Dredging Feb-06
Star Maritime Maxim, Cantor Fitzgerald $345 8 x drybulk carriers from TMT Jan-07
III. Ship Leasing
54. Of all the progressive capital structures that we have been used over the previous three years, the
vessel leasing market has the most direct impact to the ordering and financing of newbuilding vessels. This
is particularly evident in the German KG market which has driven substantial orders of container vessels
and is increasing active in other asset classes.
55. It is interesting to note that volumes have been declining in the German KG market, as they have
in the UK Tax Lease market, which is the other main tax driven leasing market.
36
Figure 23. Non Tax Leasing Figure 24. Tax Leasing
0.28 0.28
1.161.86
2.762.16 0.45
1.47
1.97
$0.00
$0.50
$1.00
$1.50
$2.00
$2.50
$3.00
$3.50
$4.00
$4.50
$5.00
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
(US
$ b
illio
ns)
KS Public Lessors
107%
42%
2.44
1.61
3.33
4.72
787%
-34%
7.50
10.609.40 8.50
4.00
4.00
2.00
1.00
$0.00
$2.00
$4.00
$6.00
$8.00
$10.00
$12.00
$14.00
$16.00
2003 2004 2005 2006
(US
$ b
illio
ns)
KG UK
27%-22%
-17%11.50
14.60
11.40
9.50
Source: Marine Money International. Source: Marine Money International.
56. The main drivers for the increase in non-tax driven leasing outlined above include the
introduction of new, competitively priced and structured non-tax driven leasing markets, including publicly
listed vessel leasing companies in Singapore and America and the introduction of bareboat leasing schemes
whereby charterers have more control over operating expenses and which generally feature lower
execution costs. Examples of such new providers include First Ship Lease, Ship Finance International and
Pacific Shipping Trust, each of whose portfolio appears below.
Figure 25. First Ship Lease Trust Portfolio
Vessel Capacity Year Built Vessel Flag Builder
Product Tankers
Cumbrian Fisher 12,921 DWT 2004 Bahamas Samho, South Korea
Clyde Fisher 12,984 DWT 2005 Bahamas Samho, South Korea
Shannon Fisher 5,421 DWT 2006 Bahamas Damen Galati, Romania
Solway Fisher 5,421 DWT 2006 Bahamas Damen Galati, Romania
Chemical Tankers
Pertiwi 19,970 DWT 2006 Singapore Usuki Shipyard, Japan
Pujawati 19,900 DWT 2006 Singapore Usuki Shipyard, Japan
Prita Dewi 19,998 DWT 2006 Singapore Shin Kurushima, Japan
Containerships
YM Subic 1,221 TEU 2003 Marshall Islands Peene Werft, Germany
Cape Falcon 1,221 TEU 2003 Marshall Islands Peene Werft, Germany
Ever Renown 4,229 TEU 1994 Panama Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Japan
Ever Repute 4,229 TEU 1995 Panama Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Japan
Dry Bulk Carriers
Fomalhaut 46,685 DWT 1999 Singapore Sanoyas Hishino Meisho, Japan
Eltanin 46,693 DWT 1999 Singapore Sanoyas Hishino Meisho, Japan
37
Figure 25a. Pacific Shipping Trust Current Portfolio
Vessel Year Built Flag State
3,081 TEU (Panamax)
Kota Kado 2005 Singapore
Kota Kaya 2005 Singapore
1,454 TEU (Handysize)
Kota Anggerik 1999 Singapore
Kota Anggun 1999 Singapore
Kota Arif 1999 Singapore
Kota Azam 1999 Singapore
943 TEU (Handysize)
Kota Rajin 2005 Singapore
Kota Ranchak 2005 Singapore
Figure 26. Pacific Shipping Trust Vessels Under Right of First Refusal (from PIL)
Hull Number (during construction) TEU
Expected year of delivery Dockyard
1. Hull No. 5322 3060 May-06 Shin Kurushima Dockyard Co., Ltd., Japan
2. Hull No. 5323 3060 Jul-06 Shin Kurushima Dockyard Co., Ltd., Japan
3. Hull No. 5298 900 Delivered Shin Kurushima Dockyard Co., Ltd., Japan
4. Hull No. C4250-22 4250 2008 Dalian New Shipbuilding Heavy Industry Co., Ltd, China
5. Hull No. C4250-23 4250 2008 Dalian New Shipbuilding Heavy Industry Co., Ltd, China
6. Hull No. C4250-24 4250 2008 Dalian New Shipbuilding Heavy Industry Co., Ltd, China
7. Hull No. C4250-25 4250 2009 Dalian New Shipbuilding Heavy Industry Co., Ltd, China
8. Hull No. CS1800-1 1800 2008 Dalian Shipyard Co., Ltd, China
9. Hull No. CS1800-2 1800 2008 Dalian Shipyard Co., Ltd, China
10. Hull No. CS1800-3 1800 2009 Dalian Shipyard Co., Ltd, China
11. Hull No. CS1800-4 1800 2009 Dalian Shipyard Co., Ltd, China
12. Hull No. CS1800-5 1800 2008 Dalian Shipping Industry Co., Ltd, China
13. Hull No. CS1800-6 1800 2009 Dalian Shipping Industry Co., Ltd, China
38
Figure 27. Ship Finance International Fleet
Type Vessel Flag Built S.Dwt Yard
Dry Bulk Golden Shadow Hong Kong 1997 73 732 Sumitomo
Dry Bulk Hull NO 1003 2008-Q4 170 00 Daehan
Dry Bulk Hull NO 1004 2009-Q1 170 00 Daehan
Jack Up West Ceres Panama 2006 300 ft KFELS
Jack Up West Prospero 2007-Q3 300 ft KFELS
Suezmax Front Maple MI 1991 149 999 Daewoo
Suezmax Front Birch MI 1991 149 999 Daewoo
Suezmax Front Pride NIS 1993 149 686 Mitsui
Suezmax Front Glory NIS 1995 149 834 Mitsui
Suezmax Front Splendour NIS 1995 149 745 Mitsui
Suezmax Front Ardenne NIS 1997 153 152 Hyundai
Suezmax Mindanao SING 1998 159 211 Daewoo
Suezmax Front Brabant NIS 1998 153 152 Hyundai
Suezmax Hull NO 1020 - 2009-Q1 156 000 Rongsheng
Suezmax Hull NO 1027 - 2009-Q3 156 000 Rongsheng
OBO Front Guider SING 1991 169 142 Daewoo
OBO Front Climber SING 1991 169 178 Hyundai
OBO Front Breaker MI 1991 169 177 Daewoo
OBO Front Driver MI 1991 169 177 Hyundai
OBO Front Leader SING 1991 169 381 Daewoo
OBO Front Striver SING 1992 169 204 Daewoo
OBO Front Rider SING 1992 169 718 Hyundai
OBO Front Viewer SING 1992 169 381 Daewoo
VLCC Front Vanadis SING 1990 285 873 Daewoo
VLCC Front Sabang SING 1990 285 715 Daewoo
VLCC Front Lady SING 1991 284 497 Hyundai
VLCC Front Lord SING 1991 284 497 Hyundai
VLCC Front Highness SING 1991 284 317 Hyundai
VLCC Front Duke SING 1992 284 480 Hyundai
VLCC Front Duchess SING 1993 284 480 Hyundai
VLCC Edinburgh LIB 1993 302 493 Daewoo
VLCC Front Ace LIB 1993 275 546 Hitachi
VLCC Front Vanguard MI 1998 300 058 Hitachi
VLCC Front Champion BS 1998 311 286 Hyundai
VLCC Front Century MI 1998 311 189 Hyundai
VLCC Front Vista MI 1998 300 149 Hitachi
VLCC MT Golden Victory MI 1999 300 155 Hitachi
VLCC Opalia tbn Front Opalia IoM 1999 302 193 KHI
VLCC Front Comanche FRA 1999 300 133 Hitachi
VLCC Ocana tbn Front Commerce
IoM 1999 300 144 Hitachi
VLCC Front Circassia MI 1999 306 009 MHI
VLCC Front Scilla MI 2000 302 561 KHI
VLCC Ariake BS 2001 298 530 Hitachi
39
VLCC Front Falcon BS 2002 308 875 Samsung
VLCC Otina tbn Front Hakata IoM 2002 298 465 Hitachi
VLCC Front Stratus LIB 2002 299 152 Hitatchi
VLCC Front Page LIB 2002 299 164 Hitatchi
VLCC Front Serenade LIB 2002 299 152 Hitatchi
VLCC Front Energy Cyprus1 2004 305 318 Hyundai
VLCC Front Force Cyprus 2004 305 422 Hyundai
Container Sea Alfa Cyprus 2005 1700 Teu Wenchong
Container Sea Beta Cyprus 2005 1700 Teu Wenchong
Container Horizon Hunter U.S. 2006 2824 Teu Hyundai
Container Horizon Tiger U.S. 2006 2824 Teu Hyundai
Container Horizon Hawk U.S. 2007-1Q 2824 Teu Hyundai
Container Horizon Falcon U.S. 2007-2Q 2824 Teu Hyundai
Container Horizon Eagle U.S. 2007-2Q 2824 Teu Hyundai
57. One of the main reasons why we have seen an influx of new leasing providers relates to the low
interest rate environment that developed concurrently with the upturn in the shipping markets. As a result
of these low interest rates a demand emerged for financial products that offered investors dividend yield
and leasing structures, both private and publicly quoted, became an ideal instrument to satisfy both the
increased demand for capital from the shipping industry and the increased demand for yield from investors.
58. In response to these favourable supply/demand fundamentals, in 2003 oil tanker owner Frontline
Ltd created an entity called Ship Finance International to acquire substantially all of Frontline’s oil tankers
and then lease them back to Frontline Ltd at charter rates that provided shareholders in Ship Finance with a
yield of approximately 8.5%.
59. This trend continued in 2004 with the listing of Arlington Tankers, which concluded a
$229 million IPO sponsored by Stena AB of Sweden and in 2005 there were two initial public offerings
made by companies that offer vessel time charter leasing services, raising $1.5 billion of total capital. The
first of these was Double Hull Tankers, sponsored by Overseas Shipholding Group, and the second was
Seaspan, sponsored by the Washington Group. Both companies are listed on the New York Stock
Exchange. In 2006 the trend continued and went global with an aggregate of $2.5 billion of total capital by
Danaos Holdings and Pacific Shipping Trust and First Ship Lease, the later two of which listed on the
Singapore Stock Exchange using the Shipping Trust structure.
1 Footnote by Turkey
The information in this document with reference to “Cyprus” relates to the southern part of the
Island. There is no single authority representing both Turkish and Greek Cypriot people on the Island. Turkey
recognizes the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC). Until a lasting and equitable solution is found within
the context of United Nations, Turkey shall preserve its position concerning the “Cyprus issue”.
Footnote by all the European Union Member States of the OECD and the European Commission
The Republic of Cyprus is recognized by all members of the United Nations with the exception of
Turkey. The information in this document relates to the area under the effective control of the Government of the
Republic of Cyprus.
40
Figure 28. Public Capital in Shipping Leasing
$2,163$2,608
$5,785
$10,479
$0
$2,000
$4,000
$6,000
$8,000
$10,000
$12,000
2003 2004 2005 2006
Cu
mula
tive
issu
ance (
US
$m
)
$0
$1,000
$2,000
$3,000
$4,000
$5,000
Annual is
su
ance (U
S$m
)
Cumulative Issuance Annual Issuance
Source: Marine Money International.
UK Tax Lease
60. The UK Tax Leasing scheme was traditionally a source of long-term bareboat lease financing
that was most suitable for newbuilding vessels because Lessees achieved a net present value benefit while
lessors enjoyed accelerated depreciation. The U.K. tax lease has always been credit driven and generally
requires an investment grade end-user. Until 2006 legislative changes took effect, the structure also
required that the lessee maintain a genuine commercial operation in the United Kingdom, and was most
effective with a newly delivered asset that remained in the UK tax lease for the majority of its useful life.
The UK tax lease has traditionally been a finance lease market with the lessor taking no residual risk. With
a recent change in tax legislation that now requires the lessor to write “true” operating leases to claim
capital allowances for non-tonnage tax leases and restrictions on the structures available to tonnage tax
lessees, there has been a sharp decline in activity, which is illustrated in the chart below.
Figure 29. UK Tax Lease Volume
$1
$2
$3
$4 $4
$2
$1
$0.0
$0.5
$1.0
$1.5
$2.0
$2.5
$3.0
$3.5
$4.0
$4.5
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
(US
$ b
illio
ns)
100%
50%
33%
0%
-50%
-50%
Source: Marine Money International.
41
German KG
61. The German KG market is a credit/asset focused time charter leasing market that has driven close
to $20 billion of equity investment, equating to approximately $100 billion of capital formation, much of
which has been used to fund newbuilding container vessels. Although this market was initially focused
almost exclusively on newly built container vessels and required charters to container lines for 10 years or
more, in recent years aggressive German KG funds have been actively buying vessels in many type of
asset class of various ages and with many employment profile from the spot market to pools to long term
charters.
Figure 30. Shipping Equity raised in the KG Market
€ 1.5 € 1.4 € 1.4
€ 2.3
€ 3.0€ 2.9
€ 2.5
€ 0.0
€ 0.5
€ 1.0
€ 1.5
€ 2.0
€ 2.5
€ 3.0
€ 3.5
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
(Euro
s b
illio
ns)
-2% 0%
60%
32%32%
-3%
-14%
Source: Salamon AG.
Norwegian KS
62. The Norwegian KS market is a project-focused bareboat leasing market that has zero direct
impact on newbuildings. Indirectly, though, the KS market adds liquidity to shipbuilding as many
shipowners use this market as a way to free up equity capital embedded in older vessels and then use that
capital to place newbuilding orders.
42
Figure 31. KS Project Volume
$275
$1,162
$1,857
$2,757
$0
$500
$1,000
$1,500
$2,000
$2,500
$3,000
2003 2004 2005 2006
(US
$ m
illio
ns)
323%
60%
48%
Source: Pareto Private Equity.
Figure 32. Selected Newbuilding Lease Transactions
Lessee Lessors, Advisors, Lenders
Amount (US$M) Structure / Pricing / Comments Month
OMI None $28 Private placement to KG Jebsen for 2 x suezmax NBs
Jan-01
Alliance Pool (FRO/OMM) Koenig & Cie $320.0
Rumored purchase by Koenig & Cie of 4 x 150,000dwt suezmax newbuildings destined for Alliance Chartering Pool Jan-05
CMA CGM KEXIM, Calyon $676.0 8x 8,200 TEU container vessels; combined export credit with French tax lease Jan-05
Parakou Shipping (seller) Ernst Jacob $105.0
Purchase by KG fund Ernst Jacob of 2 x 74,700 tanker newbuildings with delivery in 2006 Mar-05
BP
Royal Bank of Scotland (equity), BNP, Société Générale, KfW, National Australia Bank (debt) $800.0
UK operating lease to provide financing for 4 x LNG carries to be delivered in 2007-2008 from HHI Apr-05
Scorship Tankers
KG JV between Konig & Cie and Scorpio Ship Management $50.0
2 x 73,000 dwt products tanker due 2007 on $22,500/day 5-year charters to Glencore & China Oil Sep-05
IMC AL Ships (JV between KGAL & V. Ships) $428.0
Deal to acquire 8 resale panamax products tankers; pending Sep-05
Horizon Lines
Ship Finance International as lessor; AMA as advisors $280.0
5 x US flag 2800 TEU container newbuildings on 12-year charter Mar-06
Berlian Laju Tankers First Ship Lease $90.0
2 x 19,900 dwt chemical tanker newbuildings + 20 x stainless steel containers w/ 12-year charterback Jun-06
Berlian Laju Tankers First Ship Lease $45.0 12-year sale/leaseback of 19,900 dwt chemical tanker newbuilding Jul-06
Mitsui OSK Lines Seaspan $334.0 Sale and 12-yr leaseback at $28,880/day of 4 x 5,100 teu ships to be delivered in 2009 Aug-06
43
ESL Shipping SEB Leasing $32.0 1 x 18,800 bulker to be delivered 2008 w/ 10-yr bareboat back Sep-06
Marine Logistics Solutions (Marsol)
Alislami Oceanic Shipping Company II Limited (managed by Tufton Oceanic) $48.0
Construction finance and 7-yr lease of 2 x DP2 AHTS vessels for delivery in 2008 Nov-06
Geden Lines
Alislami Oceanic Shipping Company II Limited (managed by Tufton Oceanic) $66.0
Sale and 7-yr leaseback of newbuilding capesize bulk carrier Nov-06
Westfal-Larsen DnB NOR Markets $293.0
Largest KS deal ever on 2 x product tankers, 2 x product tanker newbuildings, and 2 x chemical tankers Nov-06
Golden Ocean Group Ship Finance International $160.0 Sale and 15-yr bareboat back of 2 x capesize newbuildings Feb-07
IV. Offshore Finance
63. According to the Lloyd’s Register/Fairplay World Shipping Encyclopedia (WSE) using data
current through 31 December 2006 there are:
100 629 vessels of 10 or more gross tons in service.
These vessels fly 197 different flags.
64. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) recognizes 167 “member” states and lists
193 countries as having acceded to one or more of the relevant conventions
65. Our analysis as summarized in Figures 33 and 34 below, which shows the top 20 ship registries
as determined by total number of vessels.
Figure 33. Top 20 registries by # of vessels in service
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 8000
United States
Panama
Japan
Unknown
Indonesia
China
Russia
Korea (South)
Singapore
Liberia
United Kingdom
Philippines
Netherlands
Italy
Norway
Spain
Greece
Bahamas
Malta
Marshall Islands
Co
un
try
Number of vessels
44
Figure 34. Total vessels in Service
United States 7481 7.43%
Panama 7374 7.33%
Japan 6893 6.85%
Unknown 4558 4.53%
Indonesia 4180 4.15%
China 3705 3.68%
Russia 3700 3.68%
Korea (South) 2821 2.80%
Singapore 2173 2.16%
Liberia 2061 2.05%
United Kingdom 2020 2.01%
Philippines 1854 1.84%
Netherlands 1670 1.66%
Italy 1602 1.59%
Norway 1538 1.53%
Spain 1490 1.48%
Greece 1485 1.48%
Bahamas 1468 1.46%
Malta 1307 1.30%
Marshall Islands 1291 1.28%
66. These 20 registries account for 60.3% of the world fleet or a total of 60 671 vessels.
45
67. For the purposes of this study the following registries will be considered as “open”
Figure 35. Total Vessels in Service
Antigua
Bahamas
Barbados
Belize
Bermuda (UK)
Bolivia
Burma
Cambodia
Cayman Islands
Comoros
Cyprus*
Equatorial Guinea
French International Ship Register (FIS)
German International Ship Register (GIS)
Georgia
Gibraltar (UK)
Honduras
Jamaica
Lebanon
Liberia
Malta
Marshall Islands
Mauritius
Mongolia
Netherlands Antilles
North Korea
Panama
Sao Tome and Príncipe
St Vincent
Sri Lanka
Tonga
Vanuatu * See Footnote 1 on page 39
68. As shown above Panama, Liberia. Bahamas, Malta and the Marshall Islands are on the top 20 list
and account for 13 501 of the 100 629 vessels in the world fleet or 13.4%.
69. Looking forward, we used the same WSE database to investigate vessels “under construction”
(defined in the WSE as those where the keel had been laid, or the vessel had been launched but not
delivered, or the vessel was still under construction). In addition we looked at vessels “on order” (defined
in the WSE as vessels “on order” or “projected”).
46
70. The following graphic and chart indicate the results for vessels “under construction”.
Figure 36. Top 20 Registries by # of Vessels Under Construction
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500
Panama
Netherlands
Singapore
Liberia
Turkey
Bahamas
Cyprus
Antigua
Marshall Islands
Cayman Islands
Hong Kong
Italy
China
United Kingdom
Malaysia
Germany
Spain
Malta
India
Norway
Countr
y
Number of vessels
Figure 37. Under Construction
Panama 474 20.5%
Netherlands 146 6.3%
Singapore 120 5.2%
Liberia 91 3.9%
Turkey 84 3.6%
Bahamas 76 3.3%
Cyprus* 75 3.2%
Antigua 64 2.8%
Marshall Islands 60 2.6%
Cayman Islands 56 2.4%
Hong Kong 56 2.4%
Italy 53 2.3%
China 51 2.2%
United Kingdom 50 2.2%
Malaysia 46 2.0%
Germany 41 1.8%
Spain 37 1.6%
Malta 37 1.6%
India 36 1.6%
Norway 36 1.6% * See Footnote 1 on page 39
71. Our data indicates that out of a total of 2 309 vessels “under construction” the top 20 list totals
1 689 vessels or 73.1% of the total. Open registries account for 933 vessels “under construction” or 40.4%
of the total.
47
72. For vessels “on order” the following data is presented:
Figure 38. Top 20 Registries by # of Vessels on Order
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900
Panama
Liberia
Singapore
Cyprus
Greece
Bahamas
Netherlands
Germany
Hong Kong
Norway
Marshall Islands
China
Antigua
Turkey
Italy
United States
Malta
Unknown
Korea (South)
Danish Int. Register
Co
un
try
Number of Vessels
Figure 39. On Order
Panama 824 15.7%
Liberia 387 7.4%
Singapore 249 4.8%
Cyprus* 247 4.7%
Greece 236 4.5%
Bahamas 222 4.2%
Netherlands 212 4.0%
Germany 208 4.0%
Hong Kong 204 3.9%
Norway 190 3.6%
Marshall Islands 186 3.6%
China 168 3.2%
Antigua 143 2.7%
Turkey 138 2.6%
Italy 135 2.6%
United States 130 2.5%
Malta 90 1.7%
Unknown 89 1.7%
Korea (South) 89 1.7%
Danish Int. Register 83 1.6%
* See Footnote 1 on page 39
48
73. Our data indicates that out of a total of 5 238 vessels “on order” the top 20 list totals
4 230 vessels or 80.8% of the total. Open registries account for 2 182 vessels “on order” or 41.7% of the
total.
74. It’s fairly obvious that with close to a majority (40%+/-) of ships under construction or on order
that owners are looking to capture the flexibility and cost benefits of operating their ships under open
registries with Panama being the major beneficiary.
75. It is also the case that the ship finance community is quite comfortable with this state of affairs.
Not only are a significant percentage of vessels on order and under construction intended to fly an open
registry flag, but a significant proportion of the owning entities are registered in countries which also
operate successful registries, e.g. Panama, Liberia, Marshall Islands and the Bahamas among others.
Home/Export Credit Arrangements
76. With respect to developing data with respect to shipyards, we decided that rather than focus on
individual yards, the data for which is quite fragmented, we would focus on the countries where the yards
are located.
77. With respect to vessels under construction, our results are shown in the following chart and table:
Figure 40. Top 10 Yard Countries # of Vessels Under Construction
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
Netherlands
Italy
Malaysia
Russia
Poland
Romania
Turkey
Korea (South)
China
Japan
Nu
mb
er
of
ve
ss
els
Yard country
49
Figure 41. Under Construction
Japan 518 22.4% 22.4%
China 410 17.7% 40.2%
Korea (South) 155 6.7% 46.9%
Turkey 116 5.0% 51.9%
Romania 87 3.8% 55.7%
Poland 77 3.3% 59.0%
Russia 74 3.2% 62.2%
Italy 69 3.0% 65.2%
Malaysia 69 3.0% 68.2%
Netherlands 66 2.9% 71.0%
78. With respect to vessels on order, our results are shown in the following chart and table:
Figure 42. Top 10 Yard Countries # of Vessels on Order
0 500 1000 1500
Spain
India
Romania
Vietnam
United States
Turkey
Germany
Japan
China
Korea (South)
Nu
mb
er
of
ve
ss
els
Yard country
Figure 43. On Order
Korea (South) 1353 25.8% 25.8%
China 1301 24.8% 50.7%
Japan 760 14.5% 65.2%
Germany 178 3.4% 68.6%
Turkey 138 2.6% 71.2%
United States 129 2.5% 73.7%
Vietnam 113 2.2% 75.8%
Romania 112 2.1% 78.0%
India 109 2.1% 80.0%
Spain 96 1.8% 81.9%
50
79. A number of observations can be made when reviewing the above data.
80. Aside from financing arrangements, which are generally specific to the combination of
owner/banker/yard involved in a contract, the ability of a yard to attract multiple orders for similar ships
enhances the yard’s efficiency and reduces the cost per ship, making the yard more competitive. The fact
that China, Japan and South Korea have 65.2% of vessels on order and 46.9% of vessels under
construction indicates that either those countries’ yards have been able to become extraordinarily efficient,
as the yards claim, or their governments are providing significant subsidies in order to maintain high
employment levels.
V. Selected Shipbuilding Finance Transactions
81. As the data provided so far in this report has illustrated, it is a challenge to win capital market
finance for ship constructions due to the lack of available cash flows prior to the ship’s delivery. The major
portion of global shipbuilding is financed through a combination of mortgage finance from traditional
shipping banks, export-import finance, and owner’s own equity. Larger companies may use capital
markets financing for other parts of their business to free up equity for shipbuilding.
82. This is by no means a universal truth however. As the relationship between the shipping industry
and the global capital markets matures, ship owners and yards have access to more and better financing
options. As this relationship has evolved over the past few years there have been several transactions that
highlighted the opportunity to utilize more complex financial structure to fund sizeable newbuilding
programs. Here, in chronological order, we feature several of the more successful transactions as case
studies in how international ship finance is being used to finance ship construction.
Aker American Shipping ASA
83. As we look back with the perspective of time, this deal that transpired in 2005 looks even better.
When DnB was initially hired, Kværner’s stock price was at NOK 25 and his shipyard had two orphaned
containerships and nothing but dreams about securing contracts to build Jones Act tankers. Five months
later, the boxships were sold to Matson at a profit, the share price was at NOK 100 and the company was
signing contracts with OSG for 10 with an option for two Jones Act tankers – a $1 billion deal that is
probably the biggest commercial order for ships ever in America at a time when the American commercial
shipbuilding industry had been declared dead by many.
84. What is more, this transaction succeeded even while other deals all around it were crumbling. For
example, when DnB NOR Markets, Enskilda and Fearnley Fonds were on the road in the US and Norway
in July to raise $125 million for the AKAS product tanker deal through a private placement, the Marinakis-
led Capital Maritime product tanker deal was failing in New York. AKAS ended up pricing at the high end
of the range and being 5x oversubscribed even while Capital Maritime was pulled after Goldman Sachs
brought in a book below the range.
85. And it was not as if the AKAS deal did not have any risk; to the contrary, the transaction was
loaded with it. By our calculations, AKAS sold about 45% of its shares to investors in the recent equity
offering for $125 million, leaving Aker with 55% of a company with an equity market capitalization of
$275 million. AKAS initially had 143 shareholders, which increased when the company issued another
350 000 shares to retail investors at NOK 65 shortly after trading began on July 11.
86. Here is how this incredible turnaround transpired.
51
87. It all started when Aker American Shipbuilding hired DnB NOR and Enskilda to raise a round of
equity. In June, the two investment banks began a roadshow, with a star studded line-up that featured
Morten Arntzen and Kjell Inge Rokke, to raise $100 million in a private placement. Proceeds from the
equity offering would be used to allow Aker/Kværner affiliate Aker American Shipping to acquire the
Kværner Philadelphia Shipyard, which would use the equity to fund the construction of 10 Veteran MT-46
class Jones Act product tankers to be built for a bareboat deal to OSG. The ships were estimated to cost
$86 million each, on average, and long term, post delivery financing was to be provided by DnB NOR.
88. Like many structured shipping deals, the challenge with AKAS was that the entire idea was a
complex series of “chicken and egg” situations, with nearly every key structural component contingent of
something else.
89. Yet remarkably, after just a few meetings, the advisors revised the share price range from
NOK 14 to NOK 18-22 and increased the deal size to $125 million. A week later, sources in Oslo told us
that the deal was priced at the high point of the new range and was 5x oversubscribed. Shortly after the
offering was completed, Aker was listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange.
90. There were two distinct aspects of the AKAS deal that got investors excited and distinguished the
deal from the load of shipping transactions that were concurrently in the market. First, investors in AKAS
were given the opportunity to own the Kværner Philadelphia Shipyard, which was clearly positioning itself
as the most efficient builder of vessels to replace the ageing US Jones Act Fleet. Second, and from a more
practical standpoint, the investors were excited about the “simple math” involved in the supply and
demand outlook for US flag product tankers and the OSG bareboats.
91. Under the structure of the deal, as the ships are delivered, AKAS would bareboat them to OSG,
who would then time charter them to an OSG subsidiary called OSG PT, which was formed for the
purpose of the transaction and then time chartered them to US oil majors. Under the terms of the bareboat,
OSG took the first five vessels for seven years and the next five vessels for five years. OSG also negotiated
an unlimited number of charter extension options of three or five years plus one year.
92. While the exact details of the deal have not been revealed, at the time market sources told us that
AKAS was planning to deliver the vessels at an average of $86.4 million. As mentioned, AKAS would
initially fund the equity portion of the deal with funds raised through their recent offering and later with
free operating cashflow once the vessels had been delivered and could be financed. As for the economic
aspect, we understand that OSG would take the vessels from AKAS on bareboat charter rates in the mid
$20 000 range.
93. Even at the time this first component of the deal was completed, it was clear that there were
definite risks that this deal carried for everyone involved. For OSG, the risk took the form of the time
charters. From a return on equity standpoint, however, OSG had little to lose. They had no money in the
deal, so any money OSG made would essentially equate to an enormous return on investment. And the
prospects for return improved as in early February 2006, OSG announced that long-term charter
agreements had been signed with BP for two of the Jones Act tankers. This followed an earlier agreement
for two of the tanker with Shell, meaning that 40% of the ten-ship order scheduled for delivery in 2010 had
been time chartered to oil majors in a matter of months. More have gone since then, further justifying the
investment.
94. For shareholders in AKAS, the major risk comes earlier than for OSG. It was absolutely critical
that the Kværner Philadelphia Shipyard deliver those vessels on time and on budget, which shipyards in the
US have not known to do. If AKAS could not produce the ships at or under budget, there would be little or
no return to the shareholders.
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95. While OSG would pay a floor rate that would keep the deal current with its lenders (DnB NOR),
the upside from this equity would be limited by charter rates and what new business the shipyard was able
to generate.
96. But in the end, what made this deal impressive was that the financial advisors involved, working
with the company, were able to put so many different pieces together to allow the transaction to come
together. Clearly this took a willingness from everyone involved to make this happen, but the key to its
success was in putting together an equity offering that got investors excited enough about the upside to
take a risk, and raised enough cash to get the OSG newbuilding program going.
Gulf Navigation
97. So far there has been only one shipping company to test the waters of the Dubai equity market
and see what the Dubai exchange has to offer. The results, however, have so far been good, proving that
the Ricardo’s principle of comparative advantage does, in fact, live on. The Middle East, currently, is flush
with cash from oil prices at sustained highs. Dubai, incidentally, does not derive the majority of its revenue
from oil. It has instead positioned itself as an international city, a place where local businesses and
investors may do business with foreigners and international companies under conditions of safety and
superior infrastructure.
98. Western-friendly Middle Eastern investing has created a logical if not presupposed comparative
advantage for shipping companies seeking capital, using regional restrictions, in a sense, to its advantage.
Founded in 2001, Gulf Navigation created what by all accounts is a first class shipping company with
reputable management. With up to six owned product tankers and one chartered-in suezmax, in addition to
some ancillary service vessels and activities, the company accomplished something in Dubai that would
not have been feasible in New York or London – and while we have not recently seen it tried, it would be
hard-pressed to achieve in Hong Kong or Singapore.
99. While it was one thing to watch companies acquire ships with private equity backers and flip
them to the public only months later in New York, or to sell 80s-built bulk carriers in London, it is, in our
view, altogether unprecedented for a company to sell a fleet to the public when nearly 80% by dwt is yet to
exist. Now for a ship owner with a view to the future, that can be a great acquisition – after all, the fleet
will be as modern as can be, while pre-delivery sales and resales are all part of industry asset trade. But
such sales are based on market views and are very difficult for the public to value, and so companies
holding a majority of newbuildings are virtually never seen in IPOs.
100. Nor, of course, have shipping companies been seen on IPOs on the Dubai exchange before, so
clearly Gulf Navigation was not deterred by lack of precedent – and they appear to have been accurate in
their assessment of their opportunities.
101. In an area where many investors are of Islamic background and concern themselves with the
requirements of Shariah law, there are two primary ways of realizing returns on invested capital: through
capital appreciation, i.e. a rising share price, or through a pro-rated share of profit, which may be paid out
through dividends. Thus you have a broader base of investors looking for a narrower set of requirements.
Equity thus becomes a primary form of long-term investing, rather than the day-trade and hedging focus
often seen in New York. Apparently this combined with the relative lack of liquidity in the Dubai market
in its developmental stages combines to make public equity investors less focused on short term returns
and more focused on the long-term potential of a company.
102. Whatever the case may be, UAE public joint stock company Gulf Navigation Holding in
August 2006 completed one of the first shipping IPOs on the Dubai exchange. The company’s primary line
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of business is the chartering and operation of crude oil, oil products and liquid chemical tankers. It owns a
fleet of six modern 48 000 dwt product tankers in addition to four service vessels and one suezmax it has
chartered through 2010. In addition to handling their own ship management, Gulf Navigation also has a
healthy ship agency business that accounted for 14% of revenue in 2005 and a commercial agency business
that includes exclusive contracts in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) region for various marine
services products.
103. The IPO was successful in raising AED 910 million (approximately $248 million) with its two-
tranche offering led by SHUAA Capital. The first tranche consisted of 273 000 000 shares sold to
individual investors, while the second consisted of 637 000 000 shares sold to institutional or individual
subscribers who applied for at least 105 000 shares. Each share was sold for AED 1, plus a charge of
AED 0.02 to cover offering expenses.
104. The offering was made to investors in the UAE and throughout the GCC region. National Bank
of Abu Dhabi served as Lead Receiving Bank on the offering, while Emirates Bank was Co-Lead
Receiving Bank. A consortium of 10 other banks worked as subscription banks in the UAE, while HSBC
handled subscriptions in the rest of the GCC.
105. The public company predecessor was originally established in Oman in 2001 before being moved
to Dubai in 2003 and began its work by chartering-in vessels, though it has since achieved ownership of six
tankers and four service vessels, and it is expected to grow to 23 tankers by 2010.
106. The founders of the company have subscribed to 745 000 000 shares in the offering, amounting
to a 45% stake in the public company. These shares are paid for in-kind with their shares in the predecessor
company. The AED 745 000 000 value of these shares was determined independently, by the Ministry of
Economy.
107. Twenty-three firms and individuals comprise the list of founding shareholders, with a couple
firms or banks playing noteworthy roles, but none larger than 12%. Importantly, prior to the IPO 72% of
Gulf Navigation was owned by individuals. This is indicative of the company’s initial start only five years
ago, followed by a private capital investment in 2004. To smooth the process of bringing a 23-holder
company public, a three-person Founders’ Committee was appointed to complete the establishment process
with the relevant regulatory authorities. Representing the founders are Mr. Abdullah Abdulrahman
Al-Shuraim as Chairman, Mr. Ghazi Abdulrahim Al-Ibrahim and Mr. Hazza B. Al Qahtani.
108. A key selling point of the company, which clearly boasts personnel capability in addition to the
value of its hard assets, is its experienced management team led by Mr. Al-Shuraim as Chairman.
109. In a world of complex motives, Gulf Navigation’s reason for an IPO was very simple: to raise
capital for expansion. As Figure 44 shows, Gulf Navigation currently has six chemical carriers and one
VLCC under construction. While the construction of these has been funded, it has reserved spots for six
more chemical carriers and four VLCCs, the construction of which the IPO proceeds are to help fund. In
addition, two of the chemical carriers under construction were funded with a bridge loan of AED
165 million ($45 million) that IPO proceeds are also intended to repay. If funding and demand are
sufficient, Gulf Navigation also has an option for four additional VLCCs.
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Figure 44. Gulf Navigation’s Fleet: Today & Tomorrow
Type of Vessel Capacity (DWT) QTY Status/Delivery
Existing Tanker Fleet (excluding service ships)
Product tankers 48,000 6 Owned
Suezmax tanker 151,000 1 Chartered
Tankers Under Construction
VLCC 300,000 1 2007
Chemical Carriers (IMO II) 47,000 4 2008-2009
Hazardous Chemical Carriers 44,000 2 2007-2008
Secured Slots for Tanker Construction Orders
VLCC 300,000 4 2007-2009
Chemical Tankers 44,000 4 2008-2009
Chemical Gulfmax 62,000 2 2008-2009
110. Altogether, including the six product tankers the company has acquired and the 17 ships it either
has under construction or for which it has reserved slots, Gulf Navigation is undertaking a massive
expansion program with an estimated value of AED 5.126 billion ($1.4 billion) which it intends to fund
25% with equity and 75% with debt. While details of individual loans are not disclosed, it is known that
they are calculated on a single vessel basis, have been secured from various international banks and are
generally priced at 100 basis points over 3-month Libor.
111. Valuing product tankers is notoriously tricky due to the massive differences in value that exist
even for vessels of virtually the same size and type. In the case of Gulf Navigation this is compounded by
the fact that most of the vessels have not yet been delivered. As such, it is somewhat encouraging that the
company’s IPO was oversubscribed by 4.3 times (Tranche I 1.9x, Tranche II 4.3x) with 46,000 GCC-based
institutions and individuals applying for shares. While this performance can be viewed as disappointing
compared to the three-digit oversubscriptions that had been the norm in the UAE, this is reflective more
than anything of current market conditions, which were lackluster in the wake of a regional market crash a
few months prior to the IPO and are no doubt further impacted by regional instability.
112. More impressive is the fact that Gulf Navigation was able to raise all the capital it was seeking
and more for growth that will not begin to pay dividends for at least a year or two and that is not expected
to reach its potential much before 2010. Consider Figure 45, put together by Lead Manager and
Bookrunner SHUAA Capital, which shows the dramatic forecasted growth in fleet size and resultant net
profits. While the IPO priced at 46.2x net profits for 2005, it is only 23.3x 2006E net profits and 10.9x
2007E net profits. This multiple falls as you project further into the future, at least if you accept SHUAA’s
prediction that profits will see a compounded annual growth rate of 65% through 2010. With a planned
dividend policy of 25% of net income, this will mean a world of difference for the types of returns
investors can expect to receive over the near versus medium and long term.
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Figure 45.
113. SHUAA analysts also project that the return on invested capital, which reached 16% in 2005, will
fall to a low of 4.32% in 2007 before getting up to 10.99% in 2010. Whatever the reasons, GCC investors,
in oversubscribing to the IPO, have demonstrated their faith in the company’s management and the
shipping markets as well as a patience in collecting returns that one would not expect to see in a venue like
New York. This could be at least partly cultural – prohibited by Shariah law from collecting interest, many
Muslims look to equity as the primary long-term form of investing and this may help to create a different
market mentality than the demand for quick returns frequently seen in New York.
114. With the reliance on future cash flow projections to provide investor returns, however, it is also
important to note on what basis these cash flow estimates are developed. A report released by SHUAA is
bullish on the future of the markets in which Gulf Navigation operates, anticipating the 85% utilization of
the global tanker fleet will grow to 94% by 2010 and that the 94% utilization rate for the long distance fleet
will reach full capacity. Much of this stems from the new IMO regulations coming into effect.
115. In addition to claiming positive fundamentals, however, Gulf Navigation has taken a number of
steps to secure a base level of income, including placing their double hull suezmax on 3-year charter to
Shell, putting two of their chemical tankers into the Stolt pool upon delivery, signing Letters of Intent to
charter out its four VLCCs to an unnamed “global oil company” upon delivery and signing a 15-year time
charter contract with SABIC worth AED1.5 billion ($408 million).
Nakilat, Inc.
116. In 1997, when the Government of Qatar established Qatar Gas Transport Corp. to coordinate all
of the transportation requirements for Qatar Petroleum, it was clear that there was going to be a mother
lode of financing and transactional activity associated with the project – about $68 billion worth between
QP and its partners at ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips as they sought to produce $15 billion per year in
revenue by 2010 by developing a 77 MTA LNG supply chain. When QGTC then formed a 100%
subsidiary called Nakilat to undertake the construction, ownership and operation of up to 27 state of the art
newbuilding LNG vessels the deals were close at hand.
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117. As the first step in this process, QG ordered a series of QMAX and QFLEX sized vessels to be
built at Daewoo, Hyundai and Samsung and delivered between 2008 and 2010. Nakilat then entered into
fixed priced, date certain shipbuilding contracts with these shipyards backed by refund guarantees provided
by Korean Government supported banks KEXIM and KDB. Simultaneous with signing the construction
contract, Nakilat entered into back-to-back 25-year timecharter contracts with the Qatargas LNG trains.
118. The financing involved here is one of the most complex we have ever seen in shipbuilding,
comprising a collection of senior bonds, junior bonds and export credit. The $4.7 billion financing,
completed in December 2006, will be used to fund the construction of the first 16 LNG vessels for which
Nakilat has entered into construction contracts. The total size of the financing was approximately
$4.7 billion, consisting of (i) $850 million of Senior Bonds and $300 million of subordinated bonds with a
27 year final maturity sold in a 144A offering (24% of total financing); (ii) $2.4 billion bank facility with a
final maturity of 19 years (51%); (iii) $725 million of Korean Export Credit Agency financing provided by
KEXIM and KEIC (15%); and (iv) $474 million of equity (10%). All of the Senior Debt is pari passu.
119. There were loads of interesting features about every tranche of this massive project/ship
financing. Acting as Nakilat's sole Ratings Agency advisor and Joint-Bookrunner Left / Deal Quarterback
for the Bond Offering, Lehman Brothers helped Nakilat successfully land a Aa3/A+ rating (the highest
possible rating based on Qatar’s sovereign rating) from Moody’s and S&P despite the high leverage and
limited recourse by positioning the company as a critical component of QP and the State of Qatar's efforts
to develop its 77 MTA LNG program, rather than a traditional shipping company. This always helps
pricing.
120. As for the bonds, they priced at 145 basis points above the 30-year Treasury, which was only
8 basis points wide of the RasGasII/3 2027 bonds, despite an increase of four years in the average life of
the bonds relative to RasGasII/3 and being a new issue. The bonds tightened only 3 basis points on the
break, demonstrating near perfect pricing of the offering; (iii) the Subordinated Bonds, which were rated
A1/A-/A-, were priced only 20 basis points wide of the Senior Bonds, which is the tightest spread ever for
a Senior / Subordinated bond project finance deal.
121. Barclays Capital, BNP Paribas, DnB NOR, and Gulf International Bank worked as bookrunners
on the $2 615 million commercial tranche. Export credit agencies KEIC and KEXIM together provided
around $725 million in additional debt, as mentioned.
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Figure 46.
Features
122. There are a variety of reasons in addition to its sheer size that this deal is extraordinarily
interesting. For one thing its complex structure alone, shown in Figure 46, defies categorization. The deal
represents the first time in the history of LNG shipping a where program approach has been employed to
finance the acquisition of vessels as opposed to debt being raised on a vessel- by-vessel basis. This is also
the first LNG shipping transaction of which we are aware to integrate debt from commercial banks, ECAs
and capital markets – together comprising 90% of the project cost with a tenor of up to 27 years. Eighty
percent of the debt is senior. The transaction also marks the first instance of an LNG shipping transaction
having raised funding from the bond market.
123. Needless to say, the successful closure of a deal like this requires a host of committed and
talented bankers and advisors. SMBC served as overall financial advisors, while Credit Suisse First Boston
and Lehman Brothers led the bond issue. Barclays Capital, BNP Paribas, DnB NOR and Gulf International
Bank worked as bookrunners on the commercial debt tranche, and KEIC and KEXIM provided export
credit. Latham & Watkins advised the sponsor on legal matters while Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom advised the lender. Independent consultants on the deal included Lloyd’s Register EMEA, Drewery
Shipping Consultants, Marsh Ltd, and Stone & Webster Consultants.
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OOIL’s $480 million Sale Leaseback with HSH
124. The $480 million transaction that HSH Nordbank structured for Orient Overseas (International)
Limited (OOIL) in late 2006 is a perfect example of a lease deal done on existing vessels for the express
purpose of financing the construction of other vessels. The complex structure retained for OOIL a
particularly high level of control of its vessels while provisions for liquidating the transaction are indicative
that, though done on existing vessels, the transaction was undertaken for the express purpose of financing
vessels under construction.
125. In a nutshell, what the deal accomplished was to allow OOIL to sell and bareboat back for a term
of eight years eight containerships ranging from 2 800 to 8 000 TEUs built between 1995 and 2004, as
shown in the fleet list that accompanies this item. This in turn unlocked capital OOIL could use to fund its
newbuilding program while retaining a maximum level of control over its vessels and rights to repurchase
them once the newbuildings come onstream and begin to generate cash flow.
The Mechanics
126. Here is how it worked. Wholly-owned OOIL subsidiary Strong Team and HSH established a
90%/10% joint venture (the JV). The JV, in turn, established eight wholly-owned Luxembourg subsidiaries
(the SPCs) and a managing company. Each of the SPCs purchased one of the eight vessels and bareboat
chartered it back to the lessee, a wholly-owned subsidiary of OOIL. So far, then, OOIL has sold and leased
back $480 million worth of vessels yet retained a 90% ownership share in these vessels. The deal would be
simple enough, except you can bet OOIL would not have needed to hire HSH for this transaction if it was
actually financing the 90% portion it owned.
127. Rather, OOIL contributed $151 875 in share capital to the JV, for 30 375 ordinary shares at
$5 each. HSH contributed $16 875 in share capital to the JV, for 3 375 ordinary shares at $5 each. So
OOIL contributed 90% of the share capital and has 90% ownership of the JV, while HSH contributed 10%
of the share capital and has a commensurate 10% ownership.
OOIL Vessels Sold & Leased Back
Figure 47.
Vessel Name Capacity (TEU) Year Placed in Service
OOCL California 5,344 1995
OOCL America 5,344 1995
OOCL Japan 5,344 1996
OOCL Hong Kong 5,344 1995
OOCL Britain 6,344 1996
OOCL China 5,344 1996
OOCL Rotterdam 8,063 2004
OOCL Belgium 2,808 1998
Source: Press release, company website.
128. This is where it starts to get a bit more complicated. The rest of the JV’s funding comes from
PPRs, or profit participating rights, which confer no voting rights and are not tradable securities. Instead
they provide a profit share to holders. Strong Team (OOIL subsidiary) has agreed to invest $81 million in
the JV and HSH has agreed to invest $312 million in the JV for proportionate considerations of PPRs (a
21%/79% split for Strong Team and HSH), amounting to a total PPR investment in the JV of $393 million.
This is where HSH provides the majority of the “equity” into the transaction, but does not get an ownership
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interest. What it gets instead is a profit share, as well as equity with a security level closer to that of senior
debt, through a mechanism to be described later.
129. The JV will lend this $393 million to its vessel-owning SPC subsidiaries in the form of a senior
loan, secured by mortgage and other covenants and a “general assignment of insurances, requisition
compensations and earnings of the respective vessels.” This provides 82% of the financing that the SPCs
need to purchase the eight vessels, and while it was contributed as equity will be ranked by the SPCs as
senior debt.
130. The remaining $87 million required by the SPCs comes from two unsecured, subordinated loans,
which function in this transaction more as the equity portion of the financing. The senior of these loans is
to be granted by Strong Team in the amount of $15 million. Importantly, it does not bear interest but
instead provides Strong Team with the option exercisable from January 2, 2010 “to purchase or procure the
sale of the vessels”, with the loans to be repaid on the exercise of the option or at January 15, 2015.
Subordinate to this is $72 million in “Investors’ Loans” provided by ING and HSH. These also will have
an eight-year term.
Figure 48. Sources & Uses
The JV Amount (US$M)
Sources
HSH PPRs $312.0
OOIL PPRs $81.0
Share Capital $0.2
Total JV Sources: $393.2
Uses
Senior Loan to SPCs $393.0
Total JV Uses: $393.0
The SPCs
Sources
Senior Loan from JV $393.0
OOIL Loan $15.0
Investor Loan $72.0
Total SPC Sources: $480.0
Uses
Purchase of 8 Vessels from OOIL $480.0
Total SPC Uses: $480.0
131. Backing up these loans is OOIL’s “irrevocable and unconditional” guarantee in respect of Strong
Team’s payment obligations to HSH pursuant to the Investors’ Loans to the SPCs. OOIL has also given an
irrevocable and unconditional guarantee to the SPCs in respect of the lessee’s payment obligations
pursuant to the bareboat charter.
132. In addition to its option to purchase or procure the sale of the vessels, Strong Team has been
granted by HSH an option to acquire its 3 375 shares in the JV in addition to an option to acquire HSH’s
PPRs in the JV.
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Conclusion
133. Ultimately, in an elegant and tax-efficient manner, HSH has structured for OOIL a transaction
whereby it retains 90% ownership of its vessels but need contribute only $96 151 875 ($151 875 share
capital + $81 million for PPRs + $15 million loan), or 20%, toward a $480 million transaction. In addition
to retaining the vast majority of ownership, it has options to acquire HSHs shares and PPRs in the JV
(valued at $312 016 875) and to purchase the vessels after 2010.
Figure 49.
134. The SPCs finance their purchase 82% with the senior secured debt funded through HSH and
Strong Team’s PPRs. HSH has put the bulk of its investment into this senior facility which, instead of
interest, ultimately pays a profit share back to HSH and is secured by OOIL. Though they were not
disclosed, we imagine that the options granted to OOIL were structured to provide an attractive upside to
HSH. No terms were disclosed on the $72 million Investors’ Loans, although clearly they were enough to
draw ING into the deal, and OOIL is a fairly strong counterparty for the lease payments.
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An Important Detail
135. With a total value of $480 million, this opened up for OOIL the capital necessary to provide 80%
financing for the purchase of four 8,063 TEU newbuildings from Samsung for a total consideration of
approximately $477 million to be delivered from 4Q 2009 to 1Q 2010 as announced in October of 2006.
The transaction was undertaken for this reason and appears to reflect a desire on the part of OOIL to retain
as close control over its vessels as possible during the lease period.
136. At the end of the Summary of the Terms of the Joint Venture, buried in the somewhat convoluted
press release issued to the Hong Kong stock exchange regarding the transaction, is the line: “The Joint
Venture and/or the SPCs and the manager of the SPCs shall be liquidated upon completion of the sale and
purchase and financing and leasing of the Newbuilds.” Assuming that the newbuildings arrive on time by
early 2010 and are financed upon their delivery, in actuality the whole transaction, constructed as an eight-
year finance lease, will only be a three-year deal.
VI. Concluding Remarks & Analysis
137. Marine Money analysis of ship financing transactions from 2000 through the end of 2006
indicates that innovative and alternative ship financing schemes have had limited direct impact on the
shipbuilding industry, but that excess liquidity created by the availability to shipowners of an
unprecedented number of such options has had a substantial indirect impact on the shipbuilding industry.
Together with a sustained strong freight market, this has been a driving force behind the development of
the current record global orderbook.
138. The limited direct impact held by these schemes is a result of the fact that contracts for the future
delivery of vessels represent “dead money” for investors unless those contracts are sold or novated. As
such the primary source of financing for newbuilding contracts continues to be, as it has historically been,
equity capital contributed by shipowners themselves and construction financing provided by commercial
lending institutions and export credit banks. These owners and banks generally possess the experience and
expertise necessary to appropriately assess the risk inherent in newbuilding contracts. These parties also
tend to have a long-term commitment to shipping, and understand the importance of committing capital a
year and more before actual delivery in order to ensure the necessary contracts are secured.
139. Some lessors with a commitment to the shipping industry, such as First Ship Lease, Tufton
Oceanic, and certain KG funds, have demonstrated a willingness to commit capital to ships under
construction as long as projected cash flows in the longer-term, typically 5-10 years, meet the necessary
return hurdles. In addition select deals such as the Gulf Navigation IPO have found ways to bring equity
investors into the financing of vessels under construction, while some companies such as Seaspan and
Danaos have been able to use public markets to underwrite some of their construction expenses so long as
there is sufficient current cash flow to provide immediate returns. However the volume of this financing to
date has been less than overwhelming.
140. The primary impact that the growing non-tax leasing industry, the increased presence of public
and private equity and the renewed importance of bonds have held for the financing of vessel construction
has been through the provision of liquidity to shipowners. As more financing options become available for
their current fleets, it becomes easier for owners to free up capital as necessary to commit to newbuilding
orders. At the same time, the improved cash position of most owners’ vis-à-vis five years ago make banks
more willing to lend as they feel more secure the owners will be able to repay the debt, even if contract
difficulties arise.
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141. This availability of capital for existing vessels allows those owners and bankers, and select
investors, who feel comfortable assessing the risk and long-term return potential of shipbuilding contracts,
to shift capital into these contracts, such as OOIL did in its deal with HSH Nordbank, creating a highly
structured lease deal that essentially took existing vessels off OOIL’s balance sheet just long enough to pay
for the construction of a new set of vessels. The supply of capital to shipping and the financing of vessel
construction are inherently interlinked, but at the end of the day the impetus falls on the shipowner to have
the savvy to package cash flows for investors and lenders as necessary while reserving capital for future
investment.